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Minimum Viable Workshop
- A commitment by the organizers, teachers, and students to increasing diversity in tech.
- It's free!
- An Installfest in which participants end up with a functional development environment on their machines.
- A Workshop day in which participants do hands-on work on some kind of curriculum.
Here’s what you need for a minimum viable workshop:
- A space with wifi
- Teachers
- Participants
- Installfest (usually Friday night)
- Workshop (usually Saturday day)
Big plusses if you can:
- Food: Friday dinner (pizza?), Saturday breakfast (bagels?), Saturday lunch (sandwiches?)
- A playgroup - a space for people to bring their children for a supervised playgroup if needed.
- Record the event for the global community. Not everyone will have access to your event.
Any number of factors can decide the size of the workshop: the size of the space, the number of teachers available, or the number students interested. If you're striking out on your own, start small and get bigger.
- Give people pizza or something else to eat, and something to drink.
- If you don't have the funding, tell people to bring their lunches.
- Put a link to the Installfest instructions on a white board, projector, or visible sign somewhere.
- Also, telling people the wifi name & password is helpful.
- Give people name tags, if you have them.
- It can be helpful to have students write "S" real big and volunteers write "V" real big on the name tags.
- Tell the students to raise their hands or find a volunteer when they are stuck on something.
- Tell the volunteers to walk around and ask people "How's it going?" or something else neutral like that, and to avoid clumping in groups of volunteers for too long at a time.
- Order breakfast & lunch ahead of time, or that day. And coffee & tea.
- Again, providing food is really nice, but not mandatory as long as it's communicated that they need to bring their own food.
- Start with an opening presentation welcoming everyone and getting people excited about the day. Then, get to work. There are a lot of different ways to run the day:
If you're in one big space, or don't have enough volunteers to have a teacher per class, you can have people go through the curriculum in the same way they went through the Installfest.
Recommendations:
- Divide students into approximate levels (maybe "Beginner" and "Advanced") and have them sit together.
- Explain which curricula would be a good place to start, depending on their goals for the day.
- The Quick Tour curriculum provides an introduction to Go, so total beginners would be fine starting with that before getting into more in depth discussions.
- Again, remind volunteers to ask students how it's going, or what they're working on, since not all of them will raise their hands when they're stuck.
If you have conference rooms or break-out spaces, and enough volunteers, breaking into small groups based on experience level and having a teacher walk the class through the curriculum can be really fun. If you're doing this, we recommend using Eventbrite to register and check people in.
Recommendations:
- If you have more than one volunteer per small group, give the teachers/TAs a few minutes to chat amongst themselves before sending the students their way.
- Remind the individual classes to take a break at least once in the afternoon.
- Give a short final presentation where you encourage people to keep learning and help out with GoBridge if they want.
- Ending with a retro is a great way to find out what the students and volunteers found exciting and challenging about the day, and suggestions they have for making the next workshop better.
- If you have the space, doing separate retros for students and volunteers can make it easier for each group to provide honest feedback about their experience, but together works, too.
Really successful workshops are part of an ecosystem, so that after the workshop is over, there is a community for students to join. It seems to work best when there is a community, events, and resources available locally.
If there isn't already a monthly meetup, plan to start one after the workshop. If you have a large enough community and a founding team with stamina, plan a series of workshops, so that workshop graduates can come back and TA the next workshop. Learn, understand, practice, teach is a powerful sequence.