Hi folks,

I'm Sage Sharp, an Outreachy organizer. I'm happy to answer questions people 
have about our program.

I'm trying to read up on several email threads, so I may not have all the 
information about what the ASF is proposing. From what I understand, ASF is 
considering being an Outreachy sponsor. It looks like the proposal is to have 
six interns working on various ASF member projects. [1]

Please note that Outreachy projects don't have to be coding projects. They 
could be projects related to design, user experience, translation, and more.

The question then posed was:

> > How does this, fundamentally, differ from the ASF simply hiring
> > interns from under-represented populations and having them work
> > on Whimsy (or whatever)? This is basically what we are doing,
> > just using Outreachy as a sort of main contractor to do so.

As to your question, Outreachy is a completely separate internship program. The 
Outreachy interns are independent contractors under Outreachy's fiscal sponsor, 
the Software Freedom Conservancy. They would not be ASF employees or 
contactors. ASF would be providing a tax-deductible donation to Software 
Freedom Conservancy to cover the $5,500 intern stipend, $500 travel stipend, 
and a $500 accounting fee for each intern working on an ASF project.

One of the benefits of participating in Outreachy is that your free software 
community gets exposed to people from marginalized groups in tech. Every 
internship round, 800 to 1,000 people have their Outreachy initial application 
approved. The contribution period allows applicants to make solid contributions 
to your project. Even if you only select one intern, you have the chance to 
introduce your project to many applicants who may have never heard of it before.

Even submitting a project to the Outreachy website may help mentors understand 
some of the issues newcomers face. The website tries to eliminate common 
barriers that newcomers face like not understanding what IRC is, not being able 
to find a mentor to contact, not being able to find a newcomer friendly issue 
to work on. Mentors have reported that even the act of signing up has helped 
them see places where their project documentation needs improving.

Outreachy also provides interns a structure that is lacking in many contract 
positions. I've identified major pain points that happen during the internship 
and developed a system for removing those issues. The structure consists of: 
feedback check-ins, a chance for interns to connect with each other, and 
support for finding a job in free software after the internship.

*Feedback and check-ins*: We have three points during the internship where 
mentors and interns independently give feedback on each other. The Outreachy 
organizers look over that feedback and make sure the internship is progressing 
smoothly. If needed, we facilitate conversations between the mentors and 
interns.

*Connecting interns*: We also have a private chat server where Outreachy 
interns can connect to each other. Being able to connect with other interns 
from other projects is essential to not feeling alone. We also have a series of 
emails and chat sessions which guide interns through common problems they 
experience during the internship.

For instance, the first chat we do is one where mentors and interns share what 
they've been struggling with. This normalizes the fact that everyone struggles, 
and that it's okay to reach out for help. People who are interns for the first 
time often need this type of reassurance.

*Support for finding a free software job*: Outreachy also provides a job 
opportunities to alums and a travel stipend for attending free software events. 
This round, we're looking into providing interviewing workshops and resume 
review.

Outreachy organizers are very experienced at supporting people from 
marginalized groups in tech. We've had over 500 interns. If your community is 
looking to increase its diversity, Outreachy is a good way to do so.

Communities like Debian, Ceph, GNOME, OpenStack, the Linux kernel, and 
Wikimedia have been participating in Outreachy for years. OpenStack and the 
Linux kernel saw a marked increase around in the number of women participants 
when they started participating in Outreachy. You can see some of the 
communities that have participated before by looking at our past round page:

https://www.outreachy.org/past-projects/

Let me know what other questions you have!

Sage Sharp
Outreachy Organizer

[1] 
https://lists.apache.org/thread.html/a02217bcc050fe713d33fe73fa14503c173db92a1e1a6c0b174a338c@%3Cdev.diversity.apache.org%3E

On 2019/06/21 21:18:21, Ross Gardler <[email protected]> 
wrote: 
> A colleague at day job is an Outreachy organizer. My understanding was that 
> she had joined the diversity list for this reason. Let me see if they are 
> having issues or are simply waiting for a moment at which they can be 
> productive
> 
> ________________________________
> From: Sam Ruby <[email protected]>
> Sent: Friday, June 21, 2019 12:06 PM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: Representational intern experience
> 
> On Fri, Jun 21, 2019 at 1:56 PM Jim Jagielski <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > And finally:
> > How does this, fundamentally, differ from the ASF simply hiring
> > interns from under-represented populations and having them work
> > on Whimsy (or whatever)? This is basically what we are doing,
> > just using Outreachy as a sort of main contractor to do so.
> 
> I just used the Contact Outreachy form[1] to send the following request:
> 
>  - - -
> 
> The Apache Software Foundation is considering becoming a sponsor
> and/or volunteering a number of mentors.  During the discussion, the
> following question was raised:
> 
> "How does this, fundamentally, differ from the ASF simply hiring
> interns from under-represented populations and having them work
> on Whimsy (or whatever)? This is basically what we are doing,
> just using Outreachy as a sort of main contractor to do so."
> 
> This is on the public [email protected] mailing list:
> 
> https://nam06.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Flists.apache.org%2Fthread.html%2Fb5af718fcb8d75a98fbd9ff378f0236050cd80ffb4d4f314d87106b3%40%253Cdev.diversity.apache.org%253E&data=02%7C01%7CRoss.Gardler%40microsoft.com%7C85ec81e4d744485a9e0608d6f67b9104%7C72f988bf86f141af91ab2d7cd011db47%7C1%7C0%7C636967407913535319&sdata=eF1QUuBiyEhBHKoRW6n0cfsJh3UeDK5fUxNTqYPvH0Y%3D&reserved=0
> 
> Would it be possible for an Outreachy Organizer to join this list and
> answer a few questions people might have?
> 
> - Sam Ruby
> 
>  - - -
> 
> - Sam Ruby
> 
> [1] 
> https://nam06.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.outreachy.org%2Fcontact%2Forganizers%2F&data=02%7C01%7CRoss.Gardler%40microsoft.com%7C85ec81e4d744485a9e0608d6f67b9104%7C72f988bf86f141af91ab2d7cd011db47%7C1%7C0%7C636967407913535319&sdata=sgBfBRjyM%2BFYVBmQyMIUZyV7OfwtVRmJcJRAiMaA3YI%3D&reserved=0
> 

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