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Re: [Edu-fr] Re: Taking over the GNU Education activity
From: |
Odile Bénassy |
Subject: |
Re: [Edu-fr] Re: Taking over the GNU Education activity |
Date: |
Mon, 10 Feb 2003 09:00:31 +0100 |
On Tue, 4 Feb 2003 20:51:04 -0500
toby cabot <address@hidden> wrote:
> Adam, Stephen,
>
> Thanks for your interest in helping GNU! I'll copy this message to
> the address@hidden mailing list and you can work with the list
> members to figure out the best way to proceed.
>
> Regards,
> Toby Cabot (GNU Project Volunteer Coordinator)
>
Adam, Stephen,
'address@hidden' gets forwarded to address@hidden, so I'm one of one
the right persons who can answer, and I say yes, please, go ahead.
There is a project called 'edu' on savannah.gnu.org, see
http://savannah.gnu.org/projects/edu
Have an account, send it to me...
>
> On Mon, Feb 03, 2003 at 12:33:37AM -0700, minddog wrote:
> > We are interested in a full organization inside schools to control,
> > monitor, and defend the students rights of free software in the
> > classroom and outside. This project is currently called "the Free
> > Software Academy", but we would like to merge it into the GNU
> > Education activity, and in doing so take over that activity (as
> > requested on the Help Wanted page).
> >
> > A short list of our planned activities:
> >
> > * Many schools force their students to use non-Free Software to
> > support non-free file formats, such as MS PowerPoint. In fact,
> > this problem was the original inspiration for the FSA project. We
> > would speak as a third party interest on behalf of students
> > asserting their rights to use Free Software, explaining the
> >
> > * Offer mailing list, Freenode, and Wiki resources to assist teachers
> > in developing courses based on free software. Good support will
> > bring satisfied schools that won't switch back very fast and that
> > will be positive about free software to other schools.
> >
> > * Post information about the activity in schools, perhaps with help
> > from the Digital Speech Project. We'll have information sheets for
> > schools and students about why Free Software is good for them, and
> > why they should care.
> >
> > "Did you know if you give your friend a program that is a
> > $.... dollar fine?"
> >
> > * Produce products which are attractive to the schools. Mainly
> > thinking of prefab packages for specific platforms. Give the
> > package a simple graphical interface and automate the installation
> > process. Make a lot of these packages then burn them on a cd and
> > give them to whoever you want to convince. Chances are good they
> > will try it and copy the CD (better explicitly say copying is
> > allowed :-) for their collegues, and with a bit of luck they will
> > install the packages on the school network....the CD production bit
> > is of course not immediately feasible.
> >
> > Some of the plans we have in order to acheive our goals:
> >
> > * Create *many, many* scenarios describing different obstacles to
> > adoption of Free Software in schools. This is best illustrated by
> > an example.
> >
> > Institution: Doesn't understand free software, likes PowerPoint and
> > shows all its educational material in it.
> >
> > Student: a GNU/Linux guru/Free Software/Free file formats
> > supporter. He wants to see some of his in-class presentations at
> > home. But there are no texinfo, postscript, HTML, or PDF formats.
> >
> > His solution: Nag teacher, teacher ignores him.
> >
> > His solution with FSA/GNU Education backing: Nag teacher, Teacher
> > ignores him, CC the ignored student's with a request to have GNU
> > Education/FSA contact the teacher.
> >
> > Teacher learns that what she/he is doing is causing her material in
> > the classroom to be partly copyrighted by microsoft.....educate!!
> >
> > Teacher downloads software to easily convert her/his file formats
> > to standard ones. She/he and her students are now very happy!
> >
> > * ...We'll have to invent every scenario and have a large FAQ put
> > together. Then we can review these and try to invent some type of
> > universal input for everyone so that we can handle all requests.
> >
> > * This is only relevant if we become the GNU Education activity
> > ... we could include fliers with GNU snail-mail (orders, (C)
> > assignments, etc) asking people to post them, as with the recent
> > "Free Software, Free Society" book leaflets.
> >
> > * Bridge between computer groups and Digital Freedom groups.
> >
> > Before we can do all this, we need a communications medium. At this
> > time, we feel the best way to do this would be to take over the GNU
> > Education activity. If you are interested, please let us know.
> >
> > Adam Ballai <address@hidden>
> > Stephen Compall <address@hidden>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
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> address@hidden
> http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/edu-fr
>
--
Odile Bénassy, développeuse de logiciels libres
Odile Benassy, libre software developer
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