Lessons learned from NCSU FOSS class

  2008-06-19 03:00:02
Free and open source software (FOSS) is only beginning to find a foothold in computer science departments in North America. FOSS tools may be used in teaching or be the subject of research or special committees, but few departments include courses that introduce students to the FOSS community. As a result, when North Carolina State University created a FOSS graduate course in the 2008 spring semester, it turned to Red Hat to find an instructor with a suitable background of FOSS involvement and university teaching experience. Community manager Greg DeKoenigsberg recommended performance tools engineer Will Cohen, who now looks back at the experience with an eye to how what he and his students learned might help other instructors. 
  PNG Image  PNG Image  PNG Image
  Related tags  


This particular article has been collected via RSS syndication. We apologize if it's too brief.
If You wish to publish articles on LinuxStreet.net please contact us.


  Similar articles found on LinuxStreet  
ImageStandards and the Lessons of 9/11
ImageLessons learned from OSS in retail
ImageLessons Learned? One Can Only Hope
ImageUbuntu releases ten lessons for the desktop
ImageOLPC Nigeria One Year Later: Hard Lessons Learned
ImageGoogle revamps Summer of Code for 2007
ImageThe birth of a FOSS application
ImageLessons Learned, Again
ImageRed Hat High update
ImageLessons from a Community Fundraising Project

Leave a comment on this article


Captcha

  
Check this if the code you see is not readable and resubmit the form.
(Data you entered will be preserved)



  

Comments (0)