Leigh,

Thanks for this. I looked at the agency's site, without much luck -- but
Ben Kovitz did find something encouraging, in item (f) of "exempt
institutions" in the 2009 Act: http://www.bppe.ca.gov/lawsregs/index.shtml

So, unless there are active efforts to offer courses that charge over
$2500, you're probably right -- my concern may have misplaced.

Still, I think this sort of thing is worth keeping our eye on, for a few
reasons:
(1) Like some others in the Wikipedia world, I present a variety of things
designed to teach people about Wikipedia, ranging from one-off edit-a-thons
to event series to a full-fledged 6 week online course. These are generally
offered for free (see above), but it's worthwhile to have some awareness of
what might catch regulators' attention. I see these various kinds of events
as related - so my interest is in more than just one-off edit-a-thons.
(2) I didn't mention before why I sent to this list -- but in general, I've
found that most of my events attract more women than men. That's also the
experience of the Wikipedia Education Program (or at least it was in the
first year or so). This is meant as nothing more than anecdotal, but I
think it's worthwhile to consider increasingly formal education programs as
a viable tool for addressing the gender gap. (The article also noted the
targeted code academy programs' efforts toward gender balance.)
(3) It also might be worth considering stuff like this as an opportunity,
rather than a threat. To the extent there is regulation around teaching
computer/online skills, perhaps it's worth thinking about whether diversity
is something that should be on the radar of an agency like this, and what
might be done to encourage that.

For anybody interested in this topic, I also posted to the Wikimedia-SFbay
email list, and there have been some worthwhile replies there as well:
* http://lists.wikimedia.org/pipermail/wikimedia-sf/2014-January/thread.html

And I first heard about it on the Sudo Room email list, where there's also
lilely to be some discussion:
* https://lists.sudoroom.org/pipermail/sudo-discuss/2014-January/005300.html

-Pete




On Thu, Jan 30, 2014 at 5:10 PM, Leigh Honeywell <le...@hypatia.ca> wrote:

> I really don't see this applying to hackathons/editathons, there's not
> much "schoolish" about those. The regulators are going after the
> "learn to code in 12 weeks" style programs that are springing up. You
> can read more about what compliance entails here:
> http://www.bppe.ca.gov , but just going from their mission I don't see
> any way they'd care about *athons:
>
> "The Bureau exists to promote and protect the interests of students
> and consumers: (i) through the effective and efficient oversight of
> California's private postsecondary educational institutions, (ii)
> through the promotion of competition that rewards educational quality
> and employment outcomes, (iii) through proactively combating
> unlicensed activity, and (iv) by resolving student complaints in a
> manner that benefits both the complaining student and future
> students."
>
> -Leigh
>
> _______________________________________________
> Gendergap mailing list
> Gendergap@lists.wikimedia.org
> https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/gendergap
>
_______________________________________________
Gendergap mailing list
Gendergap@lists.wikimedia.org
https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/gendergap

Reply via email to