Maybe I misunderstood your initial goal.
If your goal is to make sure there is a new generation of network engineers to 
replace us as we get old, then you want to make sure there's are cohorts of 
working-age or very-nearly-working age people who know the fundamentals of 
network engineering. So the target demo is 18-25 year olds. I would want to 
assume very little prerequisite knowledge, and use simple enough language that 
a young teenager might still enjoy it, but that's not the goal. I know my kid 
enjoyed and contributed to IETF Hackathons even at age 10.

"Prerequisite knowledge" may be surprising, though. Students entering 
university now have a lower level of literacy than they did five years ago, 
having lost 1-2 years of school and having less focus on school since the 
pandemic. Many have no knowledge of file systems or PC hardware, having 
experienced all internet on phones and tablets.

So that's why I went straight to content. I was thinking, "What do I wish 
new/aspiring network engineers knew?"

Lee

-----Original Message-----
From: Randy Bush <[email protected]> 
Sent: Monday, February 5, 2024 2:29 PM
To: Howard, Lee <[email protected]>
Cc: RIPE List <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [ripe-list] RIPEng

This message is from an EXTERNAL SENDER - be CAUTIOUS, particularly with links 
and attachments.



folk have been teaching addressingm forwarding, LANs, routing, services 
workshops since 1988.  props to Alvise Nobile of ICTP who organized the first 
workshops.  folk such as the NSRC have vast open source materials and tools to 
teach these things.  no need to reinvent the wheel.

imiho, we need to make some initial scoping on audience.  do we want to target 
tweens and early teens with programming and computer concepts?
or so we want to target older students who have grown up with laptops, the 
internet, and teach networking and services?  or ...

my personal take is that there are a bunch of folk focused on serving the 
younger set and making the next generation of programmers and UI designers.  
and that is not really our main bailiwick.  we should focus on network and 
services engineering.  but i am biased.

to put my money where my mouth is (sorry for another idiom), i volunteer to 
teach basic routing, but need folk to help organise, recruit, ...
and i don't think it is the ncc's role this season, as folk are beating the ncc 
up over budget.

randy

-- 

To unsubscribe from this mailing list, get a password reminder, or change your 
subscription options, please visit: 
https://lists.ripe.net/mailman/listinfo/ripe-list

Reply via email to