GSOC expectations: Difference between revisions
From MoodleDocs
Helen Foster (talk | contribs) (→During the community bonding period: changing order) |
|||
Line 17: | Line 17: | ||
* Refine your specification based on feedback from your mentor and the wider Moodle community. | * Refine your specification based on feedback from your mentor and the wider Moodle community. | ||
* Add subtasks to your tracker issue in roughly chronological order for all your project milestones. | * Add subtasks to your tracker issue in roughly chronological order for all your project milestones. | ||
* Post your code as patches to tracker subtasks initially. | * Post your code as patches to tracker subtasks initially, alternately changes can be posted to Git with a links added to tracker issues. | ||
* Post regularly in the forums to build a dialogue with the community. Advertise major milestones to maintain community interest and draw in new testers and more feedback. | * Post regularly in the forums to build a dialogue with the community. Advertise major milestones to maintain community interest and draw in new testers and more feedback. | ||
* Provide documentation in Moodle Docs. | * Provide documentation in Moodle Docs. |
Revision as of 08:12, 9 May 2011
The following is expected from our GSOC students:
During the community bonding period
- Ensure you've introduced yourself in our GSOC 2011 Introductions forum.
- Create a specification for your project in Moodle Docs and post in an appropriate Using Moodle forum asking for feedback.
- Post in your blog about your project specification and/or your first impressions of the Moodle community. Tag your entries 'moodle' and 'gsoc'.
- Attend an online orientation meeting (date to be confirmed).
Each week:
- Login to moodle.org and read any forum posts of interest to you.
- Chat with your mentor(s) and/or with Helen.
- Participate in the GSOC group chat gsoc2011@conference.moodle.org.
During the coding period
- Refine your specification based on feedback from your mentor and the wider Moodle community.
- Add subtasks to your tracker issue in roughly chronological order for all your project milestones.
- Post your code as patches to tracker subtasks initially, alternately changes can be posted to Git with a links added to tracker issues.
- Post regularly in the forums to build a dialogue with the community. Advertise major milestones to maintain community interest and draw in new testers and more feedback.
- Provide documentation in Moodle Docs.
Each week:
- Post in your blog summarizing what you've been working on, any problems you've run into, and what you're planning to do next.
- Have a meeting with your mentor.
- Participate in the GSOC group chat.
In the final week:
- Post in your blog a summary of everything you have worked on for GSOC 2011.
- Add a comment to your tracker issue with the download link to the code for your project.
- Post in an appropriate Using Moodle forum to inform the community of your project work.
- Ensure that user documentation for your project is available in Moodle Docs.
- Share your project code by adding an entry in the Modules and plugins database, including download, discussion and documentation links.