Samuel Verschelde a écrit :

Le lundi 13 juin 2011 00:52:18, andre999 a écrit :
Samuel Verschelde a écrit :
Hello to everyone,

I'm sure there's someone among you who wants to help Mageia but hasn't
found yet the good way to do it. Today is your lucky day, because
there's a job that's available and can be really useful and interesting:
coordinating the packagers mentoring program.

You know that one key point of success for Mageia is in the ability to
welcome new packagers. The better we will be at it, the better the
distro will be. The packagers mentoring program has been created for
that reason and several packagers have been or are being mentored. But
we have some difficulty knowing who is being mentored by who and who
hasn't found a mentor. And we need also to find more mentors and more
apprentices.

During a packagers weekly meeting, misc invited us to read the following
article about mentoring programs in open-source projects:
http://blogs.gnome.org/bolsh/2011/05/31/effective-mentoring-programs/

Very interesting, especially many of the comments.

I invite those who haven't read it yet, to read it. I'll quote one of the
mentoring best practices that were given: "In bigger projects, keeping
track of who is a mentor, and who is mentoring who, and inviting new
mentors, and ensuring that no-one falls through the cracks when a mentor
gets too busy, is a job of itself."

I'm looking for someone who could fill that "job".

Description of the job:

- keep track of:
-- who's being mentored by who, how well it's going
-- who needs a mentor and hasn't found one yet (this is one of the most
important parts: no volunteer must be forgotten, volunteers are too
precious !)
-- who can mentor more apprentices (and sometimes convince packagers to
become mentors or accept one more apprentice)

- be available for questions from apprentices or mentors, by mail, and if
possible, to be present on the IRC channel #mageia-mentoring on freenode

- help mentors with gathering "junior tasks" (bugzilla is a never empty
reserve that can be used for that. Maybe ask the bug triage team to help
identify such tasks. Maybe a "junior task" keyword in bugzilla would do
the trick)
-- small bugs to fix
-- new small packages to import in the distribution
-- backports

- promote mentoring (empower users into contributers. Working with the
marketing team would be great I think):
-- make the mentoring program known (MLs, forums, web, etc.)
-- look for new apprentices
-- look for new mentors

Some useful skills:
- be autonomous (ie no need to check that you're doing the work)
- good written english (communication is very important in this job)
- knowledge about packaging is a plus but not mandatory (the key aspects
can be taught to you)
- being or having been a mentor, or having been mentored would be a plus,
but not mandatory

More information about the job:
- does not require a big amount of work, but real committment to the task
and regularity
- remember that you have a coordination role, not an authoritative role.
The difference in that is that you're not here to give orders but to
facilitate the mentoring program.
- you don't have to be alone to do this job if it's too much for one
person: you can find other helpful people wanting to help you if needed
and rely on the other teams (but finding them *is* part of your job ;)
).
-  this "job offer" concerns everything that revolves around the
mentoring of new packagers, but if it's successful maybe other teams can
follow the same approach (i18n, QA, etc... ).
-  depending on your level of confidence, experience and will, you could
be helped in your work. Maybe someone from the council can supervise and
help you at least at the beginning; or, if no one steps up, I can help
you bootstrap and organize your new "job".

So, who's in?

Samuel Verschelde

That is an excellent idea, a mentoring program coordinator.
I've had some thoughts along those lines for some time.
I'd be glad to contribute, especially via email and editing the wiki, where
I could almost always respond the same day.
But my time zone availability (generally after 22h utc) puts me at a
disadvantage for irc communications and meetings.
(But as part of a coordinating team, that should work well.)

Maintaining the mentor/apprentice database, as Kharec suggested, is to me a
key part of the role. Information such as mentors available, and their
strengths/focus, usual time zones available, communication modes
preferred, languages spoken, and current apprentices, Would-be apprentices
should have similar information listed.
Not much different from the information currently in variously wiki pages,
but maintained by the coordinator in one location.

<aside>
One thing that occurred to me is that there is no imperative that mentoring
process happens only in English.  If an apprentice is more comfortable in
another language, and they find a mentor speaking that language, why not ?
  Sure, it is useful to have basic English knowledge, but it is evident
that many (if not most) contributors speak English as a second language.
</aside>

Experience packaging, either as a mentor or apprentice is highly
recommended in my view, at least for the key person.  (My experience is as
a apprentice with Shikamaru -- an excellent mentor, btw -- and my time
zone availability is probably why I haven't officially completed the
process.) Also some programming experience could be useful.  (I imagine
that most candidates would have that.)

But also mentoring can apply to other things than packaging.  So maybe we
should give a broader scope to the mentoring coordinator job ?
Including bugteam, QA, as well as packaging.
That would make it more useful, as well as more interesting.
(I would be very interested in contributing to something like that.)

So what does everyone think ?

Thanks for the input, but there's one point that's still unclear to me : do
you candidate for the job ? :p

(the timezone question can be a problem, but not necessarily a blocking one)

Samuel

Yes :)
It's an important task, and I think I would do it well.
With my (albeit somewhat limited) packaging experience and getting to better know the community, I have a much better understanding of the whole Mageia development process than I did even a few months ago. And how this fits in.

--
André

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