[KDE-India] Fwd: [Wikimediaindia-l] above-and-beyond hospitality to newbies at an Indian open source event

sankarshan sankarshan.mukhopadhyay at gmail.com
Mon Mar 4 07:22:54 UTC 2013


forwarding because it has a context in Pradeepto's blog


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Arnav Sonara <sonara.arnav at gmail.com>
Date: Sun, Mar 3, 2013 at 11:49 PM
Subject: Re: [Wikimediaindia-l] above-and-beyond hospitality to
newbies at an Indian open source event
To: Wikimedia India Community list <wikimediaindia-l at lists.wikimedia.org>
Cc: events at lists.openhatch.org


Hey,

I did read Pradeepto's "The Bardoli Incident" and kudos to him for
helping those students personally.

This is a very common issue at least in Gujarat and Maharashtra where
I have conducted plenty of Outreach activities.

Students do not ask question, at least not in front of others just
because of shyness or maybe they want to listen everything first and
then question. Thus at the end of sessions when we break up we see
many students waiting eagerly outside the room to ask questions and
interact.

In an event like KDE Meetup which AFAIK was the first ever in Gujarat
you are expected to have *newbies* and by newbies I mean a person who
does not know much about IRC channel, mailing list, Open source
communities but is well verse in programming or is already a
developer. So the first few sessions should always be an Introduction
to that Community, unless we are having Hackathons/DevCamps.

Also language barrier is another issue, not all the participants of
these two states are trained to listen in English for hours and hours,
so some kind of demo or hands on should be helpful and if we have a
local contributor in the community then he/she can interact with
participants in local language.

And now talking about WMF and India. I am glad that Language
Engineering Team visits Pune quite often and B'lore too, but maybe its
high time now they start exploring other cities too? Resources can be
arranged if someone from community takes the initiative with the help
of Chapter and WMF. (/me runs away else Alolita will kick him :-D ) .
But please do think upon this.
Maybe the next visit of Language Engineering Team should be in an
entirely new city and community (just a suggestion).

Thanks.


On Sun, Mar 3, 2013 at 11:14 PM, Sumana Harihareswara
<sumanah at wikimedia.org> wrote:
>
> (cross-posting to wikimediaindia-l and the OpenHatch events list)
>
> I recently read a thought-provoking piece, "The Bardoli Incident," by a
> Gujarati open source software contributor.[0]  It's a moving story of
> hospitality to newbies and I wanted to share it with you.
>
> I especially appreciate that Pradeepto Bhattacharya personally took it
> upon himself to stop newbie attrition at the event.  My Indian parents
> taught me a heritage of hospitality, as I remembered in "Be Bold: An
> Origin Story".[1] So this kind of heroism, the heroism of the host,
> speaks deeply to me.
>
> It's a tough balance, respecting each participant's right to drop out
> while ensuring they know that we want them to stay.  I think
> Bhattacharya got it right by asking honest questions and adapting the
> newbies' experience.  Maybe other event organizers reading this have had
> similar experiences?
> --
> Sumana Harihareswara
> Engineering Community Manager
> Wikimedia Foundation
>
> [0] http://pradeepto.livejournal.com/18619.html
>
> [1]
> http://adainitiative.org/2012/06/sumana-harihareswaras-be-bold-an-origin-story-keynote-at-open-source-bridge/
>
> _______________________________________________
> Wikimediaindia-l mailing list
> Wikimediaindia-l at lists.wikimedia.org
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--
Thanks
Arnav (ricku).
(User:Rangilo_Gujarati)

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-- 
sankarshan mukhopadhyay
<http://sankarshan.randomink.org/blog>


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