Re: [Wikimediaindia-l] Wikimedia's participation in Google Summer of Code

2011-12-03 Thread Yuvi Panda
On Fri, Dec 2, 2011 at 12:04 AM, Jessie Wild jw...@wikimedia.org wrote:
 Thanks for sharing this link, Yuvi! As someone completely unfamiliar with
 the topic, I am wondering if you all consider the issues discussed in that
 paper still an accurate depiction of the state in education in 2011.


Pretty much the same. The specifics differ (Facebook has 'replaced'
hanging out at the beach/local-place-of-choice), but the overall
picture is still scarily accurate. Nobody really cares much.

-- 
Yuvi Panda T
http://yuvi.in/blog

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Re: [Wikimediaindia-l] Wikimedia's participation in Google Summer of Code

2011-12-01 Thread Yuvi Panda
Not specific to MediaWiki or GSoC, but this document[1] by Shakti
Kannan explains a lot about the common issues you'll face if you're
doing Open Source advocacy in Indian colleges.

[1]: 
http://www.shakthimaan.com/downloads.html#shakthimaan-indian-challenge-of-floss-advocacy


-- 
Yuvi Panda T
http://yuvi.in/blog

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Re: [Wikimediaindia-l] Wikimedia's participation in Google Summer of Code

2011-12-01 Thread Sudhanwa Jogalekar
The paper says it so well !!
+1000 to that !!!

I have been doing FOSS promotion for about 11 years now
(www.plug.org.in) and faced same issues all the time. Except that they
now know there is something called Linux and open source, nothing much
has changed in all these years.

You can at least teach to the students and may be they can accept a
few things, but teaching FOSS (or anything for that matter) to
teachers is a nightmare. You can get about 1-2 % teachers max. from
whom you can get some positive response.

Well, I can go on and on and on  on this topic.

-Sudhanwa


On Fri, Dec 2, 2011 at 12:04 AM, Jessie Wild jw...@wikimedia.org wrote:
 Thanks for sharing this link, Yuvi! As someone completely unfamiliar with
 the topic, I am wondering if you all consider the issues discussed in that
 paper still an accurate depiction of the state in education in 2011.

 Thanks!
 Jessie

 On Thu, Dec 1, 2011 at 10:22 AM, Yuvi Panda yuvipa...@gmail.com wrote:

 Not specific to MediaWiki or GSoC, but this document[1] by Shakti
 Kannan explains a lot about the common issues you'll face if you're
 doing Open Source advocacy in Indian colleges.

 [1]:
 http://www.shakthimaan.com/downloads.html#shakthimaan-indian-challenge-of-floss-advocacy


 --
 Yuvi Panda T
 http://yuvi.in/blog

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 --
 Jessie Wild
 Global Development, Manager
 Wikimedia Foundation



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-- 

~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~!
web: www.sudhanwa.com  blog: www.sudhanwa.in
Twitter: sudhanwa Check on FB, Linkedin for more.

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Re: [Wikimediaindia-l] Wikimedia's participation in Google Summer of Code

2011-12-01 Thread Srikanth Lakshmanan
On Fri, Dec 2, 2011 at 00:04, Jessie Wild jw...@wikimedia.org wrote:

 Thanks for sharing this link, Yuvi! As someone completely unfamiliar with
 the topic, I am wondering if you all consider the issues discussed in that
 paper still an accurate depiction of the state in education in 2011.


Fewer things have changed from 2007 to now.

1. Internet penetration has increased, atleast lot many people have
broadband now, but still things have to improve.
2. Facebook. (the timepass/hanging out the author mentions happens online
now.)
3. GNU/Linux or open source are not completely new terms for atleast city
students, most of them would have heard, many more students *use*
opensource (be it ubuntu / android etc), but collaboration / contribution
still needs awareness.
4. The number of rock stars like Yuvi at college level who are aware of the
outside world, has increased. But proportionately they are still like
Wikipedia editors : Wikipedia readers.

-- 
Regards
Srikanth.L
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Re: [Wikimediaindia-l] Wikimedia's participation in Google Summer of Code

2011-11-30 Thread Sumana Harihareswara
On 11/30/2011 01:48 AM, wikimediaindia-l-requ...@lists.wikimedia.org wrote:
 Date: Wed, 30 Nov 2011 12:00:00 +0530
 From: Srikanth Lakshmanan srik@gmail.com
 Subject: Re: [Wikimediaindia-l] Wikimedia's participation in Google
   Summer  of Code
 To: Wikimedia India Community list
   wikimediaindia-l@lists.wikimedia.org
 Message-ID:
   ca+30auneu4ikx61222z+vvnndgxz1zwdqgdhv5ypwvhm5vl...@mail.gmail.com
 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
 
 On Wed, Nov 30, 2011 at 01:53, Sumana Harihareswara
 suma...@wikimedia.orgwrote:
 
  I managed MediaWiki's participation in Google Summer of Code this year,
  and could talk with anyone interested in participating, anyone
  researching it, and anyone who is curious.  :-)  We try to document our
  participation on mediawiki.org wiki pages.
 
 Thanks Sumana for posting the summary voluntarily, was good to read them.

Glad I could help!

 At the risk of sounding foolish comparing content creation and software
 development, I have few questions. Feel free to ignore them if they are
 foolish ones :)

Yes, it is a very big difference, comparing content creation and
software development.  It might be more useful to try to look at other
*writing* projects or other similar projects for comparison, such as
essay contests and Wiki Loves Monuments.

Also, GSoC is a FULL-TIME project for participants; they work 40
hours/week for three months.  So you might want to consider Google
Code-In as another model to compare
http://google-opensource.blogspot.com/2011/10/google-code-in-are-you-in.html
.  Code-In asks for code, documentation, and other contributions in the
form of smaller tasks.  Similarly OpenHatch http://openhatch.org/blog/
has the goal of bringing new people into open source with bite-size
tutorials and tasks.

You've asked some huge questions.  I shall answer them as well as I can.

 1. Do students come up with own project proposals / take up community's
 ideas and work on them. Whats the level of motivation / ownership between
 the two. I am asking this just to compare GEP's model of asking students to
 write on designated topics and if it has an impact on motivation.

The answer is both.
http://en.flossmanuals.net/GSoCStudentGuide/ch007_finding-the-right-project/
and
http://en.flossmanuals.net/GSoCStudentGuide/ch008_writing-a-proposal/
give more details.  Basically, open source communities have basic ideas
that they offer the students.  Students applying for GSoC have to choose
among 175 open source projects, which vary in population, codebase size,
language, platform, etc., etc., and create proposals for the tasks
they'll spend 3 months working on. The students, in applying to work
with any project, have to write proposals detailing what they will do
and how.  The timeline from 2011:

http://www.google-melange.com/document/show/gsoc_program/google/gsoc2011/timeline

You probably also want to read
http://en.flossmanuals.net/GSoCMentoring/defining-a-project/ .  The
mentors who have written that manual have a lot of experience regarding
encouraging students.

Different projects have different processes for soliciting proposals and
managing proposal submissions.

 2. What factors do you think make students to continue contributing to the
 opensource community?

This is a big and open question and many people are trying to figure it
out.  Some thoughts on this from the GSoC mentors' manual:
http://en.flossmanuals.net/GSoCMentoring/building-a-lifetime-contributor/

There are many factors; some of them are probably very long-term, and
some of them are easier to affect.  Experts Leslie Hawthorn and Mel Chua
think we have to work in terms of engineering education -- Hawthorn is
working on ensuring that kids around the ages of 11-14 know that they
have the power to tinker with software, and Chua has done a lot of work
on bringing open source work into the undergraduate computer science
curriculum via http://teachingopensource.org/index.php/POSSE .

I think it helps if a student has free time to contribute to open source
even during the academic year.  So, having to earn money via part-time
jobs, or having family responsibilities (cooking, cleaning, caretaking,
etc.), or having parents who don't understand and scorn this hobby (you
should be studying instead! why are you working for free?) decreases
the likelihood of continued contribution.

It helps a lot, I think, if students make personal connections, feel
that their work is valued, can see that their work makes a difference,
and can see a career path that open source contribution helps with.
These are factors that Google Summer of Code and similar programs can
help with.

This is not a comprehensive list.  There are people writing
dissertations about this topic!  :)

 3. How crucial is the role of mentors in it. Who are the mentors
 usually(WMF staff / community members?), how do they join as mentors?. I am
 asking this particularly since I see mentors' involvement among reasons for
 failure.

I

Re: [Wikimediaindia-l] Wikimedia's participation in Google Summer of Code

2011-11-30 Thread Srikanth Lakshmanan
Thanks Sumana for the details. Help much in understanding GSoC from student
participation angle. Thanks again.

Regards,
Srikanth L
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Re: [Wikimediaindia-l] Wikimedia's participation in Google Summer of Code

2011-11-29 Thread Srikanth Lakshmanan
On Wed, Nov 30, 2011 at 01:53, Sumana Harihareswara
suma...@wikimedia.orgwrote:

 I managed MediaWiki's participation in Google Summer of Code this year,
 and could talk with anyone interested in participating, anyone
 researching it, and anyone who is curious.  :-)  We try to document our
 participation on mediawiki.org wiki pages.


Thanks Sumana for posting the summary voluntarily, was good to read them.
At the risk of sounding foolish comparing content creation and software
development, I have few questions. Feel free to ignore them if they are
foolish ones :)

1. Do students come up with own project proposals / take up community's
ideas and work on them. Whats the level of motivation / ownership between
the two. I am asking this just to compare GEP's model of asking students to
write on designated topics and if it has an impact on motivation.

2. What factors do you think make students to continue contributing to the
opensource community?

3. How crucial is the role of mentors in it. Who are the mentors
usually(WMF staff / community members?), how do they join as mentors?. I am
asking this particularly since I see mentors' involvement among reasons for
failure.

You need not restrict to mediawiki as org, can you share your experiences
from opensource world too.

-- 
Regards
Srikanth.L
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