Hi, Ivaylo -- thanks for the writeup! (I'm sorry it's been so quiet here... I think everyone is dealing with the mid-semester crunch right now. I definitely am...)

Albert also gave a brief overview of the activity of Research and
Innovation Initiative on Free Software (Initiative pour la Recherche et
l'Innovation sur le Logiciel Libre http://www.irill.org). It is a project
between the  Universities of Paris 7, Paris 6 and Inria. It's main goal is
to bring together researchers that do work on subjects close to the
free/open source world.

I was looking at the website for IRILL, and was struck by the second part of their mission, which reads: "educational: adapt curricula for users, system administrators, and developers to prepare them for a computing infrastructure in which FOSS plays a prime role."

I wasn't able to find any more information about the education-specific activities, though... do you have any more information about what sorts of efforts are going on for the "education" part of IRILL's mission, and who we might get in contact with about it? (I apologize that I do not speak French, but others on this list do!) It sounds like there may be some natural overlaps of interest and potential collaborations here.

After this talk, a talk by Benjamin Nguyen from Inria was given. He spoke
about the experience in training high school CS teachers at the university
UVSQ (http://www.uvsq.fr).  This initiatives was a consequence of the
decision of the French education administration to create a CS class in
the last year in the science grade in high-schools in France. Due to the
lack of teachers in CS, some universities offered such a training for the
wanna-be CS teachers.

I would love to hear more about this -- what role did open source play in the CS class? If there are any open course materials from the effort, there are some people on this list who are interested in high-school level CS education who might want to take a look.

The next talk was one by Thierry Stoehr. He is involved with the promotion
of Free Software technologies in his university (Paris 7). He is also a
CEO of the Center for Free Software Training (Centre de Formation aux
Logiciels Libres -- CF2L), a public structure which goal is to provide
training on FLOSS technologies to the employees of the universities of the
Paris region --
administrative workers and teachers/researchers. The center is open for
more than a year now and offers training courses in different technologies
-- Mozilla (Firefox, Thunderbird), Libre/Open Office, LaTeX, Gimp,
Inkscape etc... They also offer on demand training if sufficient number of
people want to be trained on given technology.

It's great that there's software usage training happening in France... do you think Thierry and the others at CF2L might be interested in taking the next step and starting to offer classes on how to modify and contribute back to Free Software projects -- even incorporating it into the basic usage training?

For instance, let's say someone is learning to use Inkscape, and finds a bug or thinks of something that could be improved. If the class teaches the students how to get in touch with the Inkscape developer community -- how to find their mailing list, how to file a bug, etc -- the user could actually end up contributing back to the project.

Finally Albert Cohen put an end of the Educational panel with a
presentation of his experience on an Android teaching and his idea to
create a Semester of Code program (SoC) inspired by the Google's Summer of
Code...
The efforts of Albert for now are focused in finding people to work with
him on this initiative, to find companies that would like to provide some
grants to students that wish to work on FLOSS projects and to create a
web-site that would list FLOSS projects available to students.

In terms of projects available to students, I think Albert might want to get in touch with Greg Hislop, Heidi Ellis, and Ralph Morelli (all three are on this list) about http://xcitegroup.org/softhum/doku.php?id=about and also with others on this list about http://hfoss.org and http://openhatch.org.

We've also got a lot of Summer of Code people on this list from many different roles -- from students to mentors to the folks who were/are responsible for running the program at Google, and they have tons of awesome insight. Some of us have worked on programs inspired by Summer of Code; http://blog.melchua.com/2010/03/04/summer-of-code-swimchart-now-with-more-generic/may be a useful resource regarding how to think of the generic structure of the program. (I ran a "Summer of Content" program back in 2007 with One Laptop Per Child and the Commonwealth of Learning -- http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Summer_of_Content_2007 is outdated now but maybe still useful in terms of people and organizations that got involved.)

Another program that might be useful to look at for inspiration is http://ucosp.ca/about/, which is for software capstone courses, and came out of Canada.

Ivaylo, if you could help us connect the speakers with the people on this list, that would be wonderful -- ask them to join the list and introduce themselves and we can start making connections directly. Thanks again for taking such great notes at the event!

--Mel
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