Community building: Difference between revisions

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== Links to Existing Open Courseware Repositories ==
== Links to Existing Open Courseware Repositories ==
I am breaking this into [[OLPC_Courseware_Review|OLPC Courseware Review]]
I am breaking this into [[OLPC_Courseware_Review|OLPC Courseware Review]]


=== Licenses ===


OLPC recommends the [[Creative Commons]] license for content licensing.
OLPC recommends the [[Creative Commons]] license for content licensing.

Revision as of 22:05, 24 April 2007

  english | español | 日本語 | 한국어 HowTo [ID# 35111]  +/-  


This page focuses on building communities to support the OLPC project. If you want to help OLPC in another manner the "Getting Involved in OLPC" and Getting_started_programming entries is a good place to start. Also check out the OLPC Foundation that focuses on stimulating grassroots organizations.

To enable the open content revolution, OLPC must not only build and distribute the XO, it must nurture and encourage three groups of people to develop content. This list is incomplete; please add. The categories are interrelated and may blend into each other; most groups will consist of people from multiple categories, and people will fall into multiple categories. This grouping is only a rough attempt at ordering.

Community Segments

  1. Hardware Developers
    1. XO hardware developers
    2. XO hardware repairers
    3. Peripheral/accessory development
  2. Software Developers
    1. Low-level software developers (drivers etc.)
    2. Code library developers (graphics, sound, etc.)
    3. Application developers (games, office programs, etc.)
    4. UI developers (sugar, accessibility, etc.)
  3. Educators
    1. XO teachers (directly using laptops with children)
    2. XO administrators (supervising XO teachers)
    3. XO teacher trainers (explaining to / supporting XO teachers)
    4. Curriculum contributors (creating raw materials for libraries etc.)
    5. Curriculum/material curators (creating/packaging "sets" of materials for classroom use)
    6. Curriculum translators (translating raw materials for libraries etc.)
    7. XO students (children using the laptops)
    8. XO student supporters (organizations/individuals from outside school systems providing financial, academic, etc. support for children using the laptops)
    9. Non-XO students (children from non-laptop countries who want to study and collaborate with laptop-using children; needs a better name)
  4. Artists
    1. XO guardians (parents/guardians of children with laptops)
    2. Graphic/web/interface designers (layouts, css, usability, book covers, print templates, etc.)
    3. Musicians/composers
    4. Journalists (writing time-sensitive, breaking-news work)
    5. Authors (writing non-time-sensitive work, fiction or nonfiction)
    6. Filmmakers/videographers
    7. Photographers
  5. Advocates
    1. Government agencies & ministries of education
    2. Advertisers/promoters
    3. Non-governmental agencies

These communities may be international or national and have sub-groups by nation or linguistic region. There are some rough ideas on how to stimulate the development of these communities. There should be special emphasis stimulating communities in developing nations.

Resources on Community Building

Current Grassroots Organizations

Here are organizations that are currently promoting OLPC. Please add to the list

Grassroots Organizations by Region

Spanish America

Links to Existing Open Courseware Repositories

I am breaking this into OLPC Courseware Review


Licenses

OLPC recommends the Creative Commons license for content licensing.