Instructor Experiences

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'''Other Comments:''' It takes more than a few months to a point of using (H)FOSS with students, so be patient.
 
'''Other Comments:''' It takes more than a few months to a point of using (H)FOSS with students, so be patient.
 
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'''Course Name:''' Dickinson College Senior Seminar - This is a year-long two course sequence required of all Computer Science majors.
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'''Level: ''' Seniors
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'''HFOSS Activity:''' Students complete a series of structured activities that guide them toward deeper engagement in and contributions to an H/FOSS community.  Teams for 4-8 work through a sequence of 3 project selection activities (explore, review, rank & select).  They then complete two installation activities (user install, developer install) followed by two bugs activities (bug gardening, bug fix).  Finally they propose additional contributions that they would like to work on.  During all of the activities they are encouraged and rewarded for engaging with the community of their selected project..
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'''HFOSS Project: ''' Teams in 2016-17 worked on: OpenMRS, Sugar Labs, React Native
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'''Instructor Name:''' Grant Braught, John MacCormick
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'''Academic Institution:''' Dickinson College
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'''Experience:''' We were happy with the general sequence of activities that students completed and very happy with their level of engagement with their H/FOSS communities.  We also allowed teams to progress through the installation and bugs activities at different paces, which worked well.  However, we had pushed teams to be ready to propose additional contributions by the end of the first semester.  This worked well for one team, but was too soon for the two other teams.  We will be allowing the bugs activities to extend into the second semester in our next iteration.  Hopefully this will allow all of the teams to gain enough experience and engagement with their projects to make more informed proposals for additional contributions.
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'''Course Name:'''  Open Source Software Development
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'''Level:''' Senior
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'''HFOSS Activity:''' Students participated in Mozilla. we started by using several POSSE assignments to learn about the tools of being part of a FOSS community. We also have access to mentors in the community. Students have been able to contribute varying levels of documentation, translation, bug reports, and bug patches.
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'''HFOSS Project:''' Mozilla
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'''Instructor Name:''' Becka Morgan
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'''Academic Institution:''' Western Oregon University
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'''Experience:''' Access to POSSE assignments made introduction of tools really clear. Having a mentor is a really big help if you can find the right mentor and if they know how to mentor. It helps to know what to ask from mentors. I have found that having mentors who can point students to a particular bug or project, like incorporating them into a project they have is the best.

Revision as of 18:47, 15 April 2017

Course Name: Data Structures

Level: Freshman to Seniors

HFOSS Project: OpenMRS and Mifos

HFOSS Activity: Students read the source code of open source projects an examples of the "real life" use of the data structures and Java language features that they are learning about. At the beginning of the semester it is very much "hand holding", i.e. look at the line such and such in file such and such and tell me what is there. By the end of the semester they are browsing GitHub repositories on their own searching for use examples of given data structures.

The students do not interact with the community and they do not contribute.

Instructor: Joanna Klukowska

Academic Institution: New York University

Observations: This works great to satisfy the students' requests for connecting the material to the real life situations. It also illustrates the fact that other people also document the code and write input validations, etc. I think that this has been of great educational benefit to my students, even though they sometimes do not even realize that.

Other Comments: It takes more than a few months to a point of using (H)FOSS with students, so be patient.


Course Name: Dickinson College Senior Seminar - This is a year-long two course sequence required of all Computer Science majors.

Level: Seniors

HFOSS Activity: Students complete a series of structured activities that guide them toward deeper engagement in and contributions to an H/FOSS community. Teams for 4-8 work through a sequence of 3 project selection activities (explore, review, rank & select). They then complete two installation activities (user install, developer install) followed by two bugs activities (bug gardening, bug fix). Finally they propose additional contributions that they would like to work on. During all of the activities they are encouraged and rewarded for engaging with the community of their selected project..

HFOSS Project: Teams in 2016-17 worked on: OpenMRS, Sugar Labs, React Native

Instructor Name: Grant Braught, John MacCormick

Academic Institution: Dickinson College

Experience: We were happy with the general sequence of activities that students completed and very happy with their level of engagement with their H/FOSS communities. We also allowed teams to progress through the installation and bugs activities at different paces, which worked well. However, we had pushed teams to be ready to propose additional contributions by the end of the first semester. This worked well for one team, but was too soon for the two other teams. We will be allowing the bugs activities to extend into the second semester in our next iteration. Hopefully this will allow all of the teams to gain enough experience and engagement with their projects to make more informed proposals for additional contributions.


Course Name: Open Source Software Development

Level: Senior

HFOSS Activity: Students participated in Mozilla. we started by using several POSSE assignments to learn about the tools of being part of a FOSS community. We also have access to mentors in the community. Students have been able to contribute varying levels of documentation, translation, bug reports, and bug patches.

HFOSS Project: Mozilla

Instructor Name: Becka Morgan

Academic Institution: Western Oregon University

Experience: Access to POSSE assignments made introduction of tools really clear. Having a mentor is a really big help if you can find the right mentor and if they know how to mentor. It helps to know what to ask from mentors. I have found that having mentors who can point students to a particular bug or project, like incorporating them into a project they have is the best.

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