Phoenix.pm: Next meeting topic

Pablo Velasquez pablo at dosomething.org
Wed Sep 22 11:44:05 CDT 1999


Hi,
First, it was great meeting everyone last evening.

To respond to your question: I'm for keeping the group together. "Beginner"
or "Advanced", there's more than one way to do it :)  

Proposal: I had a general idea that I wanted to bring up. I was thinking
about a workshop for a local university or college. Meaning, as a group we
create a Intro. to Perl type curriculum that we present at colleges...this
is certainly a longer term project, perhaps a topic of discussion for a
meeting? (I was thinking of it as providing a service to the community)

My motivation for this type of project is that you create a system for
institutionalizing Perl at the academic level. You get more members, you
encourage Perl being taught, therefore, increasing the level of awareness,
etc. Once you create relationships with different computer science
departments you begin to create a system of Perl being taught...

I looked at ASU's programming curriculum and I didn't find any web-related
materials, which seemed odd to me...(but maybe I was looking in the wrong
area)

I remember looking at NYU's curriculum and they didn't have much either
(except for the adult class)...so I've been considering this for a while :)

Anyway, just an idea.

-Pablo

At 07:34 AM 9/22/99 -0700, you wrote:
>I think that we now have a critical mass of people that are relatively
>new to Perl in the group, so I'll be giving a Perl 101 presentation for
>the next meeting.  If any of you fall into this category, or you are an
>expert, and you want to critique my presentation, :) try to make it to
>this meeting.  I want to be sure that everyone is getting useful
>information out of these meetings.
>
>Also, I'm kicking around the idea of having one "beginner's" meeting and
>one "advanced" meeting each month.  Feedback?  Good idea?  Bad idea?
>
>-- 
>People understand instinctively that the best way for computer
>programs to communicate with each other is for each of the them
>to be strict in what they emit, and liberal in what they accept.
>The odd thing is that people themselves are not willing to be
>strict in how they speak, and liberal in how they listen.
>--Larry Wall, 2nd State of the Onion Address, August 1998
>




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