SIGCSE 2013 Workshop Notes
Notes from the SIGCSE 2013 Workshop
OpenFE Workshop Learning Materials Sprint
3/6/13
These are unedited notes taken by various people during the SIGCSE 2013 pre-conferencence workshop
File created on etherpad: http://openetherpad.org/OpenFE
Now saved on the foss2serve wiki: http://foss2serve.org/index.php/Notes_SIGCSE_Workshop_2013
SIGCSE Workshop Agenda: http://foss2serve.org/index.php/Agenda_SIGCSE_Workshop_2013
Pre-Workshop Activity Schedule: http://foss2serve.org/index.php/Pre-Workshop_Activity_Schedule
http://foss2serve.org/index.php/Intro_to_FOSS_Activity
The textbook "Practical OSS Exploration" is at: http://teachingopensource.org/index.php/Practical_OSS_Exploration_textbook (there isn't a link on the TOS homepage for this, and it's surprisingly hard to find... We should probably fix this...)
Materials Resources: https://zenit.senecac.on.ca/wiki/index.php/Dive_into_Mozilla
Stage 1 Comments
The course related activities need expectation setting - that we want them to think and come in with some preliminary ideas, but not final plans
Contact Info
- Peter Froehlich, phf@cs.jhu.edu, Johns Hopkins Computer Science, Senior Lecturer, Gaming and Systems "Stuff" in general.
- Karl R. Wurst, karl.wurst@worcester.edu, Worcester State University, Professor and Chair of Computer Science.
- Heidi Ellis, ellis@wne.edu, Western New England University, Chair and Assoc. Prof. of Computer Science and Information Technology
- Mao Zheng: mzheng@uwlax.edu, Department of Computer Science, University of Wisconsin-La Crosse
- Lori Postner: Lori.Postner@ncc.edu, Dept of MAT/CSC/ITE, Nassau Community Cmunity College, Garden City, NY
- Cam Macdonell: macdonellc4@macewan.ca, Dept of Computer Science, Grant MacEwan University
- Joey Kendall-Morwick: jmorwick@indiana.edu (currently at DePauw Univeristy, Dept of Computer Science)
- Darci Burdge Nassau Community College darci.burdge@ncc.edu
- Greg Hislop Drexel University hislopg@drexel.edu
- Michelle Purcell Drexel University mjw23@drexel.edu
- Peter Froehlich Johns Hopkins phf@cs.jhu.edu
- Stoney Jackson Western New England University stoney.jackson@wne.edu
Stage 1
First two weeks seem OK
1.4 Register a channel on freenode: http://blog.freenode.net/2008/04/registering-a-channel-on-freenode/
Second two weeks 2.1 - both Karl & Greg have sample activities create one on wordpress look at http://teachingopensource.org/index.php/Planet_Feed_List on how to set up a blog and tag post on personal page on wiki include information on planet and talking about tagging blog posts - provides a way to direct certain posts to outside groups through planets or aggregators without having to send all your posts there.
2.2 - post on personal page on wiki 2.3 - Etherpad - may not need to be done in stage 1; don't want the use to seem artificial - seems like no good use of this during the second two weeks
What goes on a blog vs. wiki wiki - achival - what will people want to know about in the future? project structure, things people need to know - documentation blog - personal reflection - experience based - commentary
2.4 FOSS field trip - should be posted on a blog as opposed to wiki
what goes on personal page on wiki vs. general l foss2serve wiki? 2.5 list of projects and evaluations and have people add to/edit that wiki page Have the participants choose a project from the list of projects on the foss2serve wiki, and then put up their evaluation on that page (this will help build up the catalog of projects....)
Third two weeks: 3.4 - perhaps this should be presented as more of a brain storming activity and make it clear that these are initial thoughts based upon what the the participant has learned thus far
- During stage 1 we need some type of question/answer period - office hours, email, piazza, list serv, etc.
Stage 2 pedagogy & accessment student team management class dynamic & organization class roadmap
have people available on IRC to help with the download/install of project
should the order of the pre-workshop activites be re-arranged? for example, should if the field trip is open ended, should that come before the FOSS in courses activity where they focus on one?
1. Introduction – 60 minutes Heidi Cam Mao Joey
Learning objectives:
Why Open Source
Productively Lost: TODO: update to this link http://teachingopensource.com/index.php/Textbook_Release_0.8 http://quaid.fedorapeople.org/TOS/Practical_Open_Source_Software_Exploration/html/ch-Foreword.html http://quaid.fedorapeople.org/TOS/Practical_Open_Source_Software_Exploration/html/sn-Foreword-Why_Traditional_Student_Projects_Are_Ineffective.html
Understand terms: What is open source software optional video (Revolution OS - also available on Netflix Instant): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CjaC8Pq9-V0 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_source - Sections 1 History, 3.1 Computer Software http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_source_software - Sections 1-3, 5, 6 http://www.catb.org/~esr/writings/cathedral-bazaar/cathedral-bazaar/index.html#catbmain http://www.catb.org/~esr/writings/cathedral-bazaar/cathedral-bazaar/ar01s11.html Discusses the foundation of Firefox which grew out of Netscape: http://www.catb.org/~esr/writings/cathedral-bazaar/cathedral-bazaar/ar01s13.html http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mozilla - Sections 1, 2.1 Example FOSS Project: Firefox? (or leave for field trip)
https://zenit.senecac.on.ca/wiki/index.php/Dive_into_Mozilla
Possible readings: http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Open_Source
Intro to Mozilla course (Open source intro) https://zenit.senecac.on.ca/wiki/index.php/Dive_into_Mozilla
6. Anatomy of a FOSS Project [formerly known as: "Intro to FOSS Projects and Dynamics"] - 60 minutes
Stoney Peter Darci
Learning Goal: Understand basic terminology used in open-source development
TO THE ACTIVITY DEVELOPER
A directed walkthrough into a specific project. Participants answer questions engaging with terminology.
TO-DO LIST
Pick project: Peter Gather links Draft walkthrough
The idea here is to provide an introduction to the "landscape of a FOSS project". Introduce "major players" (well-known opensource projects?) and define major players (86?) Firefox - Mozilla GNOME Apache
OpenMRS Ushahidi Sahana Mifos Sugar (one-laptop-per-child) HFOSS Project list: http://xcitegroup.org/softhum/doku.php?id=g:hfoss_and_oss_projects
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Introduction https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Developer_Guide key terms such as (use major players as examples to introduce these terms) What is a forge? Not all open source projects exist in a forge. The status of a project may be anywhere in the planning to mature stages. Regarding community - What major roles/teams exist within the project? releases: find version number system for project. code repository policies: e.g. http://nvie.com/posts/a-successful-git-branching-model/ packaging upstream (no artifact) downstream (no artifact) trackers: find the tracker tickets: look at some tickets roadmap, etc.: find the roadmap. How are releases managed? How First couple of chapters in "Productively Lost" ? http://teachingopensource.org/index.php/Textbook_Release_0.8 Mel has a good overview of some parts in "Roadmap Merge" activity here:http://mchua.fedorapeople.org/posse/POSSE-booklet.pdf
Possible links: http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Open_Source
Peter's Silly Attempt
Pick a project: Lighttpd. http://www.lighttpd.net/ Why? Small enough to get a handle on rather quickly (especially since they have a semi-documented plugin system http://redmine.lighttpd.net/projects/lighttpd/wiki/HowToWriteALighttpdPlugin so you can build a small piece before building a big piece), important enough since used on popular websites. Tracker/Tickets: http://redmine.lighttpd.net/projects/lighttpd/issues tracks both bugs and features ticket status from new to feedback to actual patches locates most issues in modules of architecture Roadmap: http://redmine.lighttpd.net/projects/lighttpd/roadmap outlines which issues are going to be fixed in which release of the project stratifies issues into what's going into the next release and what's going to be addressed (a lot) later release numbering is 1.4.concrete for next release, 1.4.x for issues that's not too far off and may lead to smaller architectural changes (but might never get fixed if things go badly), 1.5.x for their next architectural vision which will overhaul the entire project Upstream/Downstream: ? uses svn/bzr? general definition: upstream is where THE source for the project lives, what will get released; downstream is where YOU work and try to fix things; patches go from downstream to upstream, not sure how in lighty yet Releases: http://blog.lighttpd.net/ and http://redmine.lighttpd.net/projects/lighttpd/wiki/Releases announcements are here but where the plan is I don't know two tracks: release candidates vs. stable releases; candidates are testing fixed issues among a wider group of people, not recommended for stable deployments Code? http://redmine.lighttpd.net/projects/lighttpd/repository IRC: irc://irc.freenode.net/lighttpd Community: http://redmine.lighttpd.net/projects/lighttpd/boards prefers IRC and forums has mailing lists as well http://redmine.lighttpd.net/projects/lighttpd/wiki/MailingLists
Stoney's Ludicrous Attempt
Project: Sugar Labs Project: http://sugarlabs.org/ Tracker/Tickets: http://bugs.sugarlabs.org/ Major Players: http://git.sugarlabs.org/teams http://www.sugarlabs.org/index.php?template=page&page=contributors_teams Forge/Repository: http://git.sugarlabs.org/sugar-base Release cycle / version numbers Upstream/Downstream: diagram with explenation Communication: IRC: http://meeting.sugarlabs.org/ & http://chat.sugarlabs.org/ Mailing lists: http://lists.sugarlabs.org/ Blog: http://planet.sugarlabs.org/ Wiki: http://wiki.sugarlabs.org/go/Welcome_to_the_Sugar_Labs_wiki Roadmap: ??? Repository strategy: https://wiki.ushahidi.com/display/WIKI/Our+Git+Repository
Darci's Excellent Attempt
Project: Sahana Eden - http://eden.sahanafoundation.org/wiki Tracker/Tickets: http://eden.sahanafoundation.org/report Major Players: http://eden.sahanafoundation.org/wiki/WikiStart#WanttoContributetoSahanaEden Forge/Repository: https://github.com/flavour/eden/fork_select Release cycle / version numbers: Communication: #sahana-eden Main Sahana Eden Channel;
Hilarious Talk about Free Software and Open Source (that my students liked, careful swear words): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UIDb6VBO9os
Aside: we need to come up with what a FOSS Roadtrip would be. Sounds like fun...
For Stoney: http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1531692
Revi Sterling
ACM ICTD conference - held every 18 months; recently in Atlanta, next one in South Africa
Development organizations involved with ICTD program Invenio (?) - based in San Francisco Net Hope World Vision UN Denver Public School District
ICTD Masters http://www.colorado.edu/atlas/newatlas/masters/ - 10 per cohort - about 6 are tech background; rest social sci or military, but with world experience, e.g., peace corp - Wide age range; some faith based motivations; heavily women; substantial international, esp. west asia - Currently on third cohort
3 semesters in class; one semester field project
Class work: See: http://www.colorado.edu/atlas/newatlas/masters/curriculum.html case studies global dev I - about dev industry global dev II - current trends in development ICTD Lab - projects from NGO quant and qual tools - in support of field work 3 grad tech courses; CS, telecomm, engineering tech courses within the program, e.g., andriod; arduino Policy/ econ course Free elective
Just for reference, Revi's level of excitement is amazing. :-)