How To Run A Jam: Difference between revisions

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__NOTOC__
Under construction by [[User:Mchua|Mel]].


{{draft}}
* finding a coordinator
* locations
* food
* communicating with olpc - getting laptops etc
* judging


== What this guide is ==
[Category:Howto]

This is a guide intended for anyone who's ever said "I want to run a [[Jams|Jam]] - what do I do to make it happen?" This guide will take you through the "I think a Jam sounds like a great idea" phase all the way through planning, getting resources for, running, and following-up on a Jam. The entire process takes between 3 weeks and 3 months to plan, depending on your timescale and the scope of your Jam. We've written this specifically OLPC-focused Jams, but it is probably an applicable resource to other kinds of open hackathons.

In the spirit of openness and collaboration, please hack this manual. Borrow it, modify it, steal it, edit it, and make it better in any way you can.

::''--Brian Jordan and Mel Chua, June 2008''

== Who this guide is for ==

== Table of contents ==

You can choose to go through the materials in this guide in any of 3 different ways, though we suggest reading the ''Step by step'' guide first, then plotting out a ''Suggested timeline'' and following it while referring to ''Resources'' as needed.

=== Suggested timeline ===

For a time-based breakdown of tasks, see the resources in this section; this is where to go to find out what to do 1 month in advance, 2 weeks in advance, 2 days in advance, 1 day after, and so on.

* [[/Suggested timeline]]

=== Step by step ===

This section covers everything in detail, but without a timeline. These are the various topics and subtopics you'll have to deal with when running a Jam.

* [[/Picking a focus]]
* [[/Getting space]]
* [[/Scheduling time]]
** [[/Matchmaking time]]
** [[/Making tutorials happen]]
** [[/Running open space sessions]]
** [[/Project work time]]
** [[/Free time]]
** [[/Judging]]
* [[/Getting people]]
** [[/Organizers]]
** [[/Participants]]
** [[/Judges]]
* [[/Getting resources]]
** [[/Food]]
** [[/Equipment]]
** [[/OLPC resources]]
** [[/Prizes]]
* [[/Following up]]
** [[/Thank you letters]]
** [[/Getting results used]]
** [[/Writing down your lessons learned]]
** [[/Sharing with the global community]]
* [[/Learning from past Jams]]

== Resources ==

This is a quick reference to templates and resources used throughout this guide.

* [[/Jam kit]]
* [[/Schedule templates]]
* [[/Invitation templates]]
* [[/Flyer and poster templates]]
* [[/Follow up templates]]
* [[/Lessons learned]]



[[Category:HowTo]]
[[Category:Jam]]

Latest revision as of 00:41, 15 August 2008



Pencil.png NOTE: The contents of this page are not set in stone, and are subject to change!

This page is a draft in active flux ...
Please leave suggestions on the talk page.

Pencil.png

What this guide is

This is a guide intended for anyone who's ever said "I want to run a Jam - what do I do to make it happen?" This guide will take you through the "I think a Jam sounds like a great idea" phase all the way through planning, getting resources for, running, and following-up on a Jam. The entire process takes between 3 weeks and 3 months to plan, depending on your timescale and the scope of your Jam. We've written this specifically OLPC-focused Jams, but it is probably an applicable resource to other kinds of open hackathons.

In the spirit of openness and collaboration, please hack this manual. Borrow it, modify it, steal it, edit it, and make it better in any way you can.

--Brian Jordan and Mel Chua, June 2008

Who this guide is for

Table of contents

You can choose to go through the materials in this guide in any of 3 different ways, though we suggest reading the Step by step guide first, then plotting out a Suggested timeline and following it while referring to Resources as needed.

Suggested timeline

For a time-based breakdown of tasks, see the resources in this section; this is where to go to find out what to do 1 month in advance, 2 weeks in advance, 2 days in advance, 1 day after, and so on.

Step by step

This section covers everything in detail, but without a timeline. These are the various topics and subtopics you'll have to deal with when running a Jam.

Resources

This is a quick reference to templates and resources used throughout this guide.