Hi Folks, TOS to me means a community and a resource. A place where I can ask questions, learn, get direction, spawn ideas and brainstorm with others. A place where I can meet and collaborate with like-minded TOS folks and get feedback on ideas and actions. And a place where I can see what others are doing in this space.
I think mostly, a space in which to generate, refine and try out ideas in collaboration with others. Just my 2 cents. Heidi -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Mel Chua Sent: Thursday, September 09, 2010 7:51 AM To: TOS Subject: Re: [TOS] TOS community video, POSSE curriculum On 09/09/2010 07:33 AM, Mel Chua wrote: > I sat down today and spent several hours on trying to reify my current > understanding of the TOS community, then the POSSE curriculum. > > Results: > http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dMwbkwHkUqM I tried to make a more comprehensible writeup on Planet - http://blog.melchua.com/2010/09/09/teaching-open-source-a-mental-model-of-th e-tos-community/ (I'll reply to the POSSE curriculum in a separate thread when I transcribe the video, just realized they're two different topics.) High-level summary: TOS is a community of practice of people who teach open source community participation in an academic context. It's not a teaching or research institution, a company or nonprofit, a software project, or a professional society, though many of its members belong to one or more of these, and we make use of their structures in order to accomplish our goals. Our primary deliverable as a community is academic source (this term feels a bit awkward to me - perhaps there's a better existing one from the teaching world?) - artifacts that assist the transfer of the ability to teach open source community participation in an academic context. Things like workshops, syllabi, curricular materials, handouts, etc. are tools to accomplish our goal, which is a human-to-human transmission of teaching, rather than the end-all-be-all themselves. Several parts fit into this: * Conferences and events in both the FOSS and academic worlds as public spaces, gatherings where we can swap this knowledge. Individual institutions, to some extent, will always be black-boxes and more private spaces; that's okay. * POSSE as an on-ramp into the community; you don't have to attend POSSE to join the TOS community by any means, but if you're interested yet don't know how to start, it's a good way to get up to speed. * Infrastructure to support digital communication within and between institutions, both hosting and maintaining it within the institution-neutral space of TOS, and helping those who want to set it up within their own institutions. * Grants to assist with all three of the above. Open question: what value does the TOS community create for each of its participants? (In other words, why are you here, and what does your school/company/project gain from your participation?) _______________________________________________ tos mailing list [email protected] http://teachingopensource.org/mailman/listinfo/tos _______________________________________________ tos mailing list [email protected] http://teachingopensource.org/mailman/listinfo/tos
