On Jul 1, 2008, at 1:37 PM, Benjamin L. Russell wrote:

I am interested in starting a new mailing list on Haskell.org, aimed mainly at liberal arts teachers and elementary-level learners of Haskell, called "Haskell-Edu: The Haskell Educational Mailing List." This new mailing list would be guided by the principle that Haskell is useful not just in research, but also in teaching programming as part of a liberal arts education, on a par with Scheme. When I suggested the idea of this mailing list to Simon Marlow, the Haskell.org mailing list administrator, he suggested that I post this idea on The Haskell Mailing List, so I am posting it here to ask for feedback.

The main purposes of this new (proposed) mailing list would be as follows:

1) To provide a primarily non-research-oriented discussion forum to serve the needs of users wishing to focus on the uses of Haskell in education, such as in high school and in introductory computer science college courses, as opposed to in research.

2) To provide a primarily non-research-oriented discussion forum to serve the needs of non-computer-science students of Haskell who wish to focus on Haskell as a language for learning programming as part of a well-rounded a liberal arts education, as opposed to an engineering/mathematics/science-oriented education.

Currently, there are two main Haskell mailing lists:

a) The Haskell Mailing List, currently used mainly for announcements and for non-beginner discussions

b) The Haskell-Cafe, currently ostensibly used for everything else, but in fact used primarily for serious academic computer-science research-oriented discussion of the language Haskell.

Neither mailing list addresses Haskell as a tool for teaching functional programming as part of a liberal arts education, and while The Haskell Cafe is ostensibly responsible for addressing beginner questions, I have witnessed several instances in which new users who were not familiar with the academic culture of The Haskell Cafe have been frowned upon for either posting messages that did not assume enough mathematical background, or for posting messages that were written in a tongue-in-cheek style, and that therefore did not fit into the serious tone of the mailing list.

(For example, a few months ago, one poster received a private e-mail message from another poster asking the former not to "pollute" The Haskell-Cafe Mailing List for assuming that screen pixel resolution was somehow related to the precision of an algorithm that picked points randomly from a square in approximating pi. Avoiding this question required the knowledge that screen resolution could be considered independently from the precision of the algorithm itself, but while this point may be elementary to mathematicians and researchers, the poster was not familiar enough with the issue to grasp this immediately, and received the above-mentioned response.)

This new mailing list is intended to cover both the issue of teaching Haskell as part of a liberal arts curriculum, and of answering beginner questions about Haskell from students who may not have a sophisticated mathematics background. The primary audience of this new mailing list would be educators and students in a liberal arts curriculum who are interested in studying Haskell for studying functional programming. Currently, the language Scheme is often used in this context (even though Scheme is not a true functional programming language), but Haskell has recently been gaining ground rapidly as a programming language in industry as well, and many students of Haskell may either not have a computer science background, or may not have a sophisticated mathematical background. Posts from such users may tend to irritate serious researchers, who are impatient and hard-pressed for time to find valuable information to aid their research, but may be welcome
in a more education-focused context.

It would seem that creating a new mailing list, Haskell-Edu, focusing on using Haskell in teaching programming in a liberal arts context, and fielding questions from students in that context, would help increase the scope of Haskell users, and help spread knowledge about Haskell to potential future users in industry. Teachers in a liberal arts curriculum could discuss teaching Haskell in a non- research context, and students of Haskell with a liberal arts- related background would be able to ask elementary questions to educators willing to discuss such questions, without being expected to have a sophisticated mathematical or computer science background.

Hi all,

I am all for a separate channel or resource for beginners in Haskell. I can imagine that even the run-of-the-mill discussions in the existing venues will scare them off. It might also be a good place for educators and students to talk about their experiences in teaching and being taught Haskell.
E.g., what kind of assignments work, which don't.

Also it will give me a venue to bring Helium to the attention of these beginners and their educators. I am currently bringing the Helium compiler up to speed (but this is not a formal announcement). However, if you simply cannot wait, set your browser to http://www.cs.uu.nl/wiki/Helium .

cheers,
Jur

--- On Sat, 6/28/08, Simon Marlow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

From: Simon Marlow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: on starting a new Haskell-related mailing list
To: "Benjamin L. Russell" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: "John Peterson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Saturday, June 28, 2008, 4:20 AM
Hi Benjamin,

Normally we create new mailing lists when the new list has
a narrow
focus and covers a clearly unoccupied niche.  In this case
you're
proposing a list that is very broad, and so I think it
needs discussion
amongst the community before we create the list, so that we
can keep a
consistent strategy.

That's not to say that I disagree with your proposal.
But it doesn't
seem immediately clear what the focus would be, and why
haskell-cafe
shouldn't serve the purpose.  One thing that isn't
clear is whether the
list you're proposing is for people interested in
*teaching* Haskell (in
which case I'd say it's a great idea), or people
*learning* Haskell (in
which case I'd consider carefully whether haskell-cafe
shoudn't be
serving that need).  That's something you need to
clarify when proposing
this list to the community.

So I suggest you send this proposal out to
haskell@haskell.org in the
first instance, and see what response you get.  Discussion
should move
to haskell-cafe quickly.

Cheers,
        Simon

Benjamin L. Russell wrote:
Greetings,

John Peterson suggested that I send you an e-mail
message requesting you to perform set-up of a new
Haskell-related mailing list that I plan to
moderate/administrate, since he said that you are the
administrator of the mailing lists on Haskell.org.

My name is Benjamin L. Russell, and I am interested in
starting a new mailing list on Haskell, which I plan to call
Haskell-Edu, specifically devoted to non-research
beginner-level educational matters, guided by the
philosophy that Haskell should be more accessible to
non-computer science major students.

This topic is not covered by any of the other mailing
lists.  I have regularly read both Haskell and Haskell-Cafe
for the past six months or so, but the former is devoted to
announcements, and the latter de facto to research matters.
Also, the general tone of Haskell-Cafe is overly academic
and research-oriented, and I feel that this creates an
unnecessary learning curve for non-computer science majors
interested in learning Haskell.

Since John Peterson recommended that I request you to
set-up the mailing list on Haskell.org, could you please
set it whenever you have free time, as follows:

Name of Mailing List:  Haskell-Edu
E-mail Address:        [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Description:           The Haskell-Edu Mailing List:
Discussion About Non-research Issues on Haskell in
Education

Could you please advise me on what I need to do to
start this mailing list?  Should I host it on haskell.org,
or just start it by myself using a non-Haskell.org mailing
list service?  Also, how should I have it listed in the
"www.haskell.org Mailing Lists"
(http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo) page for the
benefit of other members of the Haskell community?

Thank you very much for your time and cooperation.

Sincerely yours,

Benjamin L. Russell

--- On Fri, 6/27/08, John Peterson
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

From: John Peterson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: RE: on starting a new Haskell-related
mailing list
To: "Benjamin L. Russell"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Friday, June 27, 2008, 12:05 AM
Hi Benjamin,

There's no problem starting a new mailing
list.  Simon
Marlow is the administrator of our lists - if you
drop him
and email he'll do the setup for Haskell.org.
Once the
list is going, you can go into the wiki and add it
to the
appropriate pages.

We've had a bunch of these special interest
lists and
most of them go dead after a few months but you
never know
...


  John

--- On Thu, 6/26/08, Benjamin L. Russell
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

From: Benjamin L. Russell
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: on starting a new Haskell-related mailing
list
To: "John Peterson"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Thursday, June 26, 2008, 4:37 PM
Greetings,

My name is Benjamin L. Russell, and I am
interested in
starting a new mailing list on Haskell, which I
plan to
call Haskell-Edu, specifically devoted to
non-research
beginner-level educational matters, guided by the
philosophy that Haskell should be more accessible
to
non-computer science major students.  (This
message is
being addressed to you because I had already sent
the
portion below twice to other administrators at
Haskell.org,
first to [EMAIL PROTECTED], and then to
[EMAIL PROTECTED], but had not received a
response
on either occasion.)

This topic is not covered by any of the other
mailing
lists.  I have regularly read both Haskell and
Haskell-Cafe
for the past six months or so, but the former is
devoted to
announcements, and the latter de facto to research
matters.
Also, the general tone of Haskell-Cafe is overly
academic
and research-oriented, and I feel that this
creates an
unnecessary learning curve for non-computer
science majors
interested in learning Haskell.

Could you please advise me on what I need to do to
start
this mailing list?  Should I host it on
haskell.org, or
just start it by myself using a non-Haskell.org
mailing
list service?  Also, how should I have it listed
in the
"www.haskell.org Mailing Lists"
(http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo) page for
the
benefit of other members of the Haskell community?

Thank you very much for your time and cooperation.

Sincerely yours,

Benjamin L. Russell
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