Sorry, I forgot a few major important details... :). For more information:
http://necc2006.pbwiki.com/

The conference will take place July 5-7 at the San Diego convention center.
For specific Volunteer-related information, see:
http://necc2006.pbwiki.com/Volunteers

On 6/1/06, Nicholas Wheeler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Hello, my name is Nicholas Wheeler and I'm pseudo-representing the DC LoCo
team (Ubuntu support group), as well as YHSLUG. I'm planning on flying out
to San Diego to attend the National Educational Computing Conference (2006),
to promote open source software in K12 schools. This is one of the largest
conferences for technology and education, and so it is a perfect place to
advocate linux and open source software. I'm writing to the Kernel Panic
linux user group and the San Diego Linux user group in an effort to get
volunteers to help us with the booths. I believe currently we're in need of
at least six volunteers, although I'm sure more would be appreciated. If you
would like to volunteer, admittance into the conference is covered, so it's
essentially free. So, if you or your friends are interested, please drop me
an e-mail. :o)

PS: Below is the more official-ish explanation of what we're doing. Also,
we're getting around 2000 Ubuntu CDs to distribute.

------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


We've just finalized the speakers schedule for the Open Source lab at
the National Educational Computing Conference 2006 in San Diego. Very
exciting.

We'll have 15 hour-long sessions that will be held in a lab setting
with 25 computers, with some GREAT speakers:

David Thornburg: "When Best is Free: An Educator's Guide to Open Source"
Michelle Moore: "Use Your Noodle, Learn Moodle: An Open Source
Learning Management System" (3 sessions - boy is she popular!)
Will Richardson: "Learning With Blogs: Bringing the Read/Write Web
Into the Classroom"
Jeffrey Elkner: "A Tour of Ubuntu with Free CD"
Jenny Horn: "Hello World: Starting at the Very Beginning with PHP"
Bryant Patten: "Open Source Technology: Why Teachers Should Care"
Tim Frichtel: "Great Web Sites with Open Source Content Management
Systems"
Steve Hargadon: "K12LTSP: Low-cost, Stable, and Reliable Computer Labs"
Chris Walsh: "Content is STILL King: FREE Blogging & Content Management
Systems"
James Klein: "Creating Communities with Open Source Tools"
Tom Hoffman: "SchoolTool: a Free, Open Source SIS and Calendaring System"
Vernon Ceder: "Computer Programming for Everybody: Teaching
Programming with Python"

We'll also have a "birds of a feather" meeting on Open Source software
in K12 schools, to be followed by a proposed dinner event with those
interested in talking about the future of Open Source software in
Education.

Mike Huffman from Indiana has also said that he will be attending, and
we're going to try and find a venue for his participation as
well--many of us are very interested in an update on the Indiana
ACCESS program!

In addition to the Open Source lab, we'll have a "Playground" area
with 6 booths to showcase different Open Source technologies
real-time. Currently planned are booths for:

SchoolTool & CanDo 2006 (A FREE, Web-Based, Competency Tracker)
Ubuntu & Fedora Core
Moodle & Moodle e-portfolio
Open Office & Firefox
Gimp
Asterisk & Mambo/Joomla




--
Nicholas Wheeler
Systems Administrator
Development InfoStructure

--
[email protected]
http://www.kernel-panic.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/kplug-list

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