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Re: [seul-edu] Re: Linux inservice day



Right, and unless it's over the summer, or during a scheduled PD day,
then chances are the schools may not be so happy to have you disrupt
some of their time.

The one I'm planning on doing will be in March I think, and I can post
my notes when I have them a bit more completed.

Scott Brooks

On Sat, 2002-09-07 at 10:10, Dan Kegel wrote:
> IMHO trying to coordinate this kind of thing worldwide or even statewide
> is problematic.  Go ahead and organize a "Day", but don't fix a date;
> let every group who wants to join in do it on their own timetable.
> That means the central organization should be a continuing resource
> for those who want to organize a "Day" any time.
> - Dan
> 
> David Bucknell wrote:
> > 
> > The Idea - I like the idea of a day very much and a deadline might help make
> > it happen.
> > 
> > Name - I'd be interested in the education angle, so although I'd like to see
> > a free Software Day -- something like an international get-out-the-vote day,
> > only you set up install parties instead of voting booths -- but I'd also be
> > for an Open Source in Education or Open Source for Schools Day.
> > 
> > Duration - A week might be better than a Day, so that people could adjust
> > their schedules to put some event on.
> > 
> > Dates - I see July 3rd and Oct 5th as the dates Linus Torvalds posted the
> > first two announcments about Linux (http://www.li.org/linuxhistory.php).
> > Both too soon ;-).
> > 
> > Remember when people were having those "wire a school" days? Maybe we could
> > jump off from that format.
> > 
> > David
> > 
> >  Quoting Chris Shaw <chrisjshaw@compuserve.com>:
> > 
> > > I like the idea of having access to some shared material to help with
> > > missionary work - I don't know anything like enough to do that myself.
> > > Having a coordinated time to have a shot also sounds good.
> > >
> > > Titles are not everything, but words have associations and carry messages.
> > > Often these things are different depending on the country / culture that
> > > you
> > > are in.  So here is my small contribution to thinking about the words you
> > > choose from my (UK) point of view, sorry if it sounds like rubbish to you :
> > >
> > > Free = Cheap giveaway, usually not worth having, seedy salesmen.
> > > Open Source = Not much, something technical and boring perhaps.
> > >
> > > I would have thought the kind of words we want should strike a chord with
> > > folks in education who, I would say, are generally in the business of
> > > working communally for the good of society.  I think words like Public,
> > > Community & Shared might be good which could lead to titles like Community
> > > Software Day, Public Software Day etc.
> > >
> > > Just a thought,
> > > Chris
> > >
> > > ----- Original Message -----
> > > From: "Douglas S. Blank" <dblank@cs.brynmawr.edu>
> > > To: <seul-edu@seul.org>
> > > Sent: Friday, September 06, 2002 3:35 PM
> > > Subject: [seul-edu] Re: Linux inservice day
> > >
> > >
> > > >
> > > > To bring the conversation back around to the inservice day, I had
> > > > proposed an international "Open Source Day". Burkhard Woelfel then
> > > > suggested a "hipper" (and "hippier") name: "Free Software Day".
> > > >
> > > > I did some further searching and found that Tony Stanco, founder of
> > > > FreeDevelopers.net, had tried to get one together last October, but
> > > > it didn't happen. He is still in support of the idea, though.
> > > >
> > > > I think the "day", whatever it be called, would be a good idea that
> > > > wouldn't necessarily require a lot of organization, money, etc. If
> > > > we just agreed on a day (or even week or month), then anyone that
> > > > was planning to do such an inservice presentation could tie it into
> > > > this.
> > > >
> > > > This would give us a common deadline with common goals, and we could
> > > > all develop and share resources (slide shows, HOWTOs, resource
> > > > links, etc) for putting on our own local presentations. Of course,
> > > > we have a slant towards education, and our resources would reflect
> > > > that, but others could join in with other emphasis if they wished.
> > > >
> > > > So, some things to consider:
> > > >
> > > > 1. Are you in favor of having such an "Open/Free Software" event?
> > > >
> > > > 2. What span of time should it cover: day, week, month? A single day
> > > > might be too short, maybe a month is too long...
> > > >
> > > > 3. What would the name of it be? Open Source, Free Software, or
> > > > something else? "Freedom of Software Week"?
> > > >
> > > > 4. What date(s)? It would be nice if there was an important day to
> > > > celebrate, such as: the date of the birth of GNU, Linus's first
> > > > post, RMS's birthday, etc. There is Feb 14 that is stamped on Tony
> > > > Stanco's "The Declaration of Software Freedom", on-line at
> > > > http://freedevelopers.net/freedomdec/index.php, but that is maybe
> > > > too political, and Feb 14 has other celebrations (Valentine's Day
> > > > here in the US).
> > > >
> > > > I don't necessarily want to bombard these lists on this topic if
> > > > y'all aren't interested. So, let's do this: send me specific answers
> > > > to these four questions, and I'll summarize in a week or so. Or, if
> > > > you have general comments that everyone would be interested in, post
> > > > them to the list so that we can discuss.
> > > >
> > > > Thanks,
> > > >
> > > > -Doug
> > > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > 
> > --
> > http://www.iteachnet.org
> > http://members.iteachnet.org/~home About Membership
> > http://opensourceschools.org Open Source Schools Journal
> > http://schoolforge.net member Schoolforge Coalition for Open Educational
> > Resources
> > 
> > ------------------------------------------------
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