TOS: Roll Call

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Are you teaching a course in open source software development? Are you in an Open Source community or business that is willing to support the teaching of community open source development practices? Join the Roll Call!

Purpose

There are more and more professors teaching open source every day.

There are also more and more professors who would like to teach open source, but don't have the experience, the know-how, or the resources to do so. Not only that, but they don't have any models to follow.

Our simple goal here is to collect a directory of professors and others who are successfully teaching the practice of open source software development to their students. It's a small but vitally important first step.

To join the roll call, please create an account, edit the wiki, and add your name, your institution, your contact information, and whatever information you believe to be relevant about your work.

P.S. If you're wondering whether you belong on this list, you almost certainly do.  :)

Professors

  • Andrew Ross. osbootcamp at gmail dot org - instructor at Carleton University also founded osbootcamp.org
  • David Humphrey (humph) david.humphrey at senecac dot on dot ca - professor at Seneca, Mozilla Foundation Educational Liaison
  • Chris Tyler (ctyler) chris.tyler at senecac dot on dot ca - professor at Seneca, Fedora contributor and board member
  • Gregory Kesden (gkesden) gregory.kesden at cmu dot edu - teaching faculty at Carnegie Mellon University
  • Tim Budd (Timbudd) budd at eecs dot oregonstate dot edu - associate professor of Computer Science at Oregon State University
  • Heidi Ellis (Heidiellid) heidi.ellis at trinity dot edu - visiting assistant professor at Trinity College (Hartford) PI on the NSF-CCLI SoftHum grant for the development of course-level support for involving students in Humanitarian FOSS

Open Source Community and Business Members

  • Greg DeKoenigsberg. gdk at redhat dot com. I'm not a professor, but I know a lot of professors, and someone's got to get the ball rolling, right?