[IAEP] Running local Sugar workshops

Caroline Meeks caroline at solutiongrove.com
Thu Dec 4 09:39:06 EST 2008


I agree that we should run workshops and that we should aim them at teachers
and parents with a goal of having 50% or more women attend.

When will we be ready? - Really soon I think.  As soon as we can get Sugar
on a Sticks to collaborate I think we will be ready from a technical side.
What do we want to teach? - Thoughts on this???
How do we do it? - Anyone done this before? How much does it cost? Should we
raise money for it or should we charge to try to cover expenses? Where
should it be? How should it be publicized.

We should recruit someone to be a project lead for such a workshop.

I actually have pretty strong feelings that gender equity is a relevant
issue for Sugar Labs.  The mission is learning to learn for EVERY child. We
believe that having the power and capability to change your tools is
important.  Sugar should be about giving all children the opportunity to
learn this.   Rich and poor, speaking any language, living in a developed
country or a developing one, and male or female. The differences between
interests, cultural expectations and learning opportunities are real between
girls and boys.  Its an issue we should care about, research, and build
tools that help both genders, and in different cultures, be able to learn,
and indeed love learning, the skills they need to do things like contribute
to open source projects.

The development teams mission includes as broad a base of contributions as
possible.  This should absolutely mean reaching out to women in all the
countries we are working in.

So, women of Sugar Labs and OLPC, I think we should all stand up, be
recognized, and say participation by women in this project, at every level
and in every role is important.

What I certainly don't want to say is that any of the men on this list or in
this project is responsible for the gender gap in this project or in the
world we are trying to change.  Nor do I think that there is some bad
behavior that men in this project need to change.  We are together doing the
hard work of changing the world and we are trying to do it by creating free
software and community.  Guys, thanks for all your hard work and I
absolutely already know that you support our shared vision of for EVERY
child, including girls and boys.

Caroline

On Tue, Dec 2, 2008 at 1:37 PM, Mel Chua <mel at melchua.com> wrote:

> Copying IAEP, slides for context are at
> http://www.slideshare.net/emmajane/form-an-orderly-queue-ladies (resend,
> since link > massive attachment. Sorry about that.)
>
>
> Oh, I don't agree with all of it either, but it sure makes for an
> interesting discussion. :) Mostly I wanted to point out slide 138 and the
> bunch following - more than anything else, the slide deck made me think "hm,
> we should run workshops." (Not a "gender thing," but as another way to reach
> people we might not be reaching now.)
>
> --Mel
> (who happens to be female, and who also happens to like brie and be wearing
> a yellow shirt right now. I consider them all about equally relevant.)
>
> Caroline Meeks wrote:
> > Hi Mel,
> >
> > This was a really interesting Slide show.  A bunch of it is not my style.
>  I like geeks, I am one,  and I think most of the open source programmers I
> know are sweet wonderful men.
> > I am passionate about getting more women into open source and into
> programming. I think we should be talking about this issue as a part of our
> shared vision for Sugar and the children of the world and as something that
> everyone in the Sugar community, male or female, agrees with.  This project
> is about equity and opportunity for all.
> >
> > I agree with her reasoning about end user workshops being an important
> tool for recruiting women.  Scratch did amazingly well with their workshop
> last summer.  I wonder if they have any numbers on male-female ratio.
> >
> > We should definitely do one.  They are pretty challenging to put
> together, and although we should be able to charge and not lose money, they
> can be financially risky and require money up front.
> >
> > If you are comfortable with it I think you should forward this to IAEP
> and get the whole group thinking about it.
> >
> > Cheers,
> > Caroline
> >
> >
> >
> > On Sun, Nov 30, 2008 at 8:35 PM, Mel Chua <mel at melchua.com <mailto:
> mel at melchua.com>> wrote:
> >
> >     These are a set of slides from a talk by Emma Jane Hogbin - slide
> >     138 starts talking about workshops.
> >
> >     This made me start thinking about Sugar. Sugarcamp wasn't really an
> >     end-user workshop.
> >
> >     Are there any plans for one?
> >     If not, what can we do to make one?
> >
> >     -Mel
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > --
> > Caroline Meeks
> > Solution Grove
> > Caroline at SolutionGrove.com
> >
> > 617-500-3488 - Office
> > 505-213-3268 - Fax
>



-- 
Caroline Meeks
Solution Grove
Caroline at SolutionGrove.com

617-500-3488 - Office
505-213-3268 - Fax
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