drupaldojo.com would be the closest thing, I think. Things are still kind of getting organized at this point, but I think it aims to be similar to what you described. ----- Cameron Eagans Owner, Black Storms Studios, LLC http://www.blackstormsstudios.com
On Sat, Dec 26, 2009 at 1:11 PM, James Benstead <[email protected]>wrote: > I've spent sizeable chunks of the last year or so trying to learn Drupal. > To start with, I had a problem understanding the documentation. Now I've > overcome that hurdle, I'm experiencing issues with the *structure* of > documentation. I am usually able to solve individual problems for individual > projects, but if I want to learn something in a more abstract fashion - for > example, learning how Drupal works with Javascript so that I can understand > a JavaScript-based module - I come a bit unstuck. > > I also hit problems if I want to sit down and just learn something new > about Drupal. Sure, I can (and do) go onto IRC and ask a question along the > lines of "I can do x, y and z with Drupal; what should I learn to do next?", > but this doesn't always work and the quality of the answers I get just isn't > consistent. > > So, what I'm proposing is something along the lines of Wikiversity ( > http://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Wikiversity:Main_Page) for Drupal: a set of > structured (but informal) courses that bring together different pieces of > documentation from both within and without d.o. > > Has anything like this been tried before? What do you think of the idea? > > --J. > -- > Google Talk/Windows Live Messenger/AIM: [email protected] > Yahoo! Messenger/Twitter/IRC (Freenode): jim0203 > Jabber: [email protected] // ICQ: 7088050 > Skype: jimbenstead > >
