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TOS: Taxonomy

975 bytes added, 14:44, 3 March 2009
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Protected "TOS: Taxonomy" ([edit=sysop] (indefinite) [move=sysop] (indefinite))
<div style="background: #ff0; padding: 2em; border: 1px solid #f00">'''This is a historical page.'''<br />Please see http://teachingopensource.org/index.php/Taxonomy for the current version of this page.</div>
 
[[Category:TOS]]
The phrase "Open Source in Education" is extremely unclear. If we're going to further the goals of Teaching Open Source, we need to talk from the same bookspeak with a consistent understanding and vocabulary.
''Please edit this page ruthlessly.'' Note that many projects cited as examples could fit into multiple levels.
'''Levels of Open Source in Education'''
= Level 1: Teaching Using Open Source Software =
This level includes initiatives such as [http://laptop.org/ OLPC], [http://k12ltsp.org/mediawiki/index.php/Main_Page K12LTSP], and the [[:fedora:Features/EducationMathSpin|Fedora Education Math spin]], which use Open Source educational software to teach other subjects, such as Mathematics or Media Arts.
= Level 2: Teaching and Studying the Use of Open Source Software =
Teaching students how to use Open Source software in various ways, and studying Open Source.
== 2A: Non-technical Use of Open Source Software ==
Open Source provides applications that are useful in many different fields of endeavor, ranging from the general ([[http://openoffice.org editing documents]] and [[http://www.gnucash.org balancing chequebooks]]) to the very specific ([http://moodle.org/ learning management systems] and [http://ngspice.sourceforge.net/ electronic circuit simulation]).
== 2B: Technical Use of Open Source Software ==
Some Open Source software is used in very technical ways that require integration, configuration, and testing. This can range from using an Open Source operating system (such as a [http://fedoraproject.org Linux] or [http://freebsd.org BSD] distribution) to controlling devices ([http://jmri.sourceforge.net/ model trains]) or setting up enterprise IT (using [http://jboss.org JBOSS], [http://www.apache.org Apache], [http://amqp.org AMQP], and so forth). The distinction between level 2A and 2B is that users in level 2B have a greater understanding of what the software does, and generally configure it to perform a specific task or operate in a specific configuration. The distinction between level 2B and level 3 is that level 2B is focused on teaching the use of the software (even though at a deeply technical level) while level 3 is focused on advancing the software (through development and related activities). == 2C: Studying Open Source == Open Source communities are interesting to those performing anthropological, social, linguistic, economic, and technical studies, due to the global, real-time nature of the collaboration that takes place within them (and the synthetic culture therefore produced) as well as the unique economic and technical frameworks employed by these communities.
= Level 3: Working Within an Open Source Community =
Teaching students how to contribute to and work within an Open Source project, collaborating with other community members on development, support, testing, documentation, bugfixing, and other collective tasks. This is teaching the "Open" in Open Source, and is the intended meaning of the phrase "Teaching Open Source".

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