Hi Dan,

Thanks for sharing your Git lecture.  The group I'm working with is in the 
process of trying to build a more expansive version of the POSSE workshops (see 
a draft at 
http://xcitegroup.org/foss2serve/index.php/Faculty_Workshop_Planning).  We 
might be able to incorporate some of what you've done.

Have you considered adding the link to your materials to the list of resources 
on TOS?  You could put it in the table here:  
http://teachingopensource.org/index.php/Teaching_Materials_Catalogue  

Cheers,

Greg Hislop
Drexel University



-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Dan Scott
Sent: Friday, February 08, 2013 10:26 AM
To: Discussions about Teaching Open Source
Subject: Re: [TOS] Contributing to the TOS textbook

On Fri, Feb 08, 2013 at 12:36:20AM -0500, Jonathan Loy wrote:
> Greetings TOS members,
> 
> I am a college student currently reading the TOS textbook for my 
> software engineering class. I deeply appreciate the work everyone has 
> put into the project, and would like to also contribute by fixing 
> typos and/or updating portions of the textbook. For example I would 
> like to contribute an alternate path for Chapter 4 & 5 by using 
> distributed version control, namely git, but given enough time bazaar 
> and mercurial. Another option is to update the text to offer more 
> specific guidance for OS X, Ubuntu, and Windows users.

On the git note, specifically, I recently wrote up an intro to version control 
& git for a talk that I gave to our comp sci students a few weeks ago. I tried 
to build in learning objectives and checkpoints, but it could certainly be 
improved. In any case, the source materials
(Asciidoc) are linked to from
http://coffeecode.net/archives/262-Introducing-version-control-git-in-1.5-hours-to-undergraduates.html
and hosted on gitorious (naturally).

> Unfortunately, I am unable to find any working issue tracker (it just 
> says fix me in plain text) or another public contribution avenue for 
> the textbook. I am hoping the textbook project is not dead, so if you 
> could please inform me how to properly help this project it would be 
> greatly appreciated. Thank you for taking the time to read my email.

I think the public contribution area is the wiki itself. Log in and edit? And 
the issue tracker seems to be the discussion section for each page. IIRC, much 
of this was written during a doc sprint a few years back. I'm not an authority 
on the TOS project at all; I'm just an interested (and mostly quiet) party who 
has slowly been trying to introduce FOSS to our students at Laurentian 
University through informal talks, as I'm not part of the Comp Sci faculty and 
not really in a position to influence the formal curriculum.
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