Kyle and others,I hope shools.sugarlabs.org will become a useful resource 
for educators.  At this point, Sugar Labs can help with the means, 
marketing, and mass:Means - We will help provide the infrastructure that 
teachers needs to work together on a global basis.Marketing - Sugar Labs with 
help promote your work to organization that are able to take advantage of the 
content you share.Mass - With Sugar Labs serving as a point of collaboration, 
we can generate the critical mass necessary to turn schools.sugarlabs.org into 
a self sustaining community.Please be patient.  Developing a community can 
be a frustrating as well as rewarding process.  Let us know how we can 
help! thanksdavid  
On  11/04/2008, 23:31, Brian Kyle ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:Hi All,

This is mostly a note for content developers and those interested in lesson 
plans.  Sugar Labs (i.e. the people behind Sugar, the software to XO's 
hardware) has deployed a Moodle server to aggregate lesson plans and courses 
developed for Sugar/XOs.  From what I hear, this is something with which 
many teachers are both comfortable and familiar.  This database is 
intended for communities such as our own!  In the interest of promoting 
free open source software (FOSS) and sharing with the community, I would 
encourage looking into this website and contributing back to help create build 
a solid set of tools for educators.  I know that it has often been 
mentioned within our own circles that content holds back implementation.
  
The website, http://schools.sugarlabs.org/, is free, easy to use, and easy to 
create an account for -- I already have.

  Welcome to the sugarlabs Moodle, the place to store your online lesson plans 
and courses. The Course categories have been sectioned off into what seem the 
most logical areas, but if there are any inconsistencies, please contact [EMAIL 
PROTECTED]   
I have copied this email to the "It's An Education Project" mailing list at 
Sugar Labs.  (Sorry guys!  Hopefully this is more info than 
spam...)  To introduce ourselves to you, we are a group out of the 
University of Wisconsin working in support of the OLPC vision.  You can 
find a brief overview of some of what we are organizing thus far at: 
http://uwolpc.pbwiki.com.  Although several opportunities are in place in 
our local community right now, we have a student org working to continue on and 
be a hub for further efforts.  Silas Bernardoni, another UW student, and I 
have had the privilege of speaking in person with David Farning both in an 
advisory role for as we grow, and with an excitement to partner with in the 
future as we mature.
  
Hopefully everyone here at UW has been well.  Look forward to impending 
official updates about our student org formation and cultivation...

Best regards,
Brian

Brian Kyle
One Laptop Per Child, Student Org
  University of Wisconsin-Madison
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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