El 25 de noviembre de 2016 13:32:25 GMT+00:00, Matthias Kirschner <m...@fsfe.org> escribió: >I'd like to get some feedback about some ideas floating around my head >at the moment, and thought that some of you might be able to help here. > > >I was talking with some people who would like to fund some concrete >Free >Software activities, focusing on research and education. > >One idea which came up is to support pupils to learn more about how >computer work, and promote hacking by providing "science packs" with >small hackable computers, and some modules, sensors etc. > >What do you think about making it easier for pupils to get access to >such tools. E.g. by having some packs in the libraries or for school >projects? > >I would be interested what you think about that, as I am not yet sure >about it. > >If you like it, do you have an idea how you could make sure that >children who are interested in that are connected around Europe? (E.g. >in Germany there is something called "Jugend hackt" -- youth is hacking >-- Is there something similar on a EU level? Or are there other ideas?) > >Thanks for your feedback, >Matthias > >-- >Matthias Kirschner - President - Free Software Foundation Europe >Schönhauser Allee 6/7, 10119 Berlin, Germany | t +49-30-27595290 >Registered at Amtsgericht Hamburg, VR 17030 | (fsfe.org/join) >Contact (fsfe.org/about/kirschner) - Weblog (k7r.eu/blog.html) >_______________________________________________ >Discussion mailing list >Discussion@lists.fsfe.org >https://lists.fsfe.org/mailman/listinfo/discussion
In UK there are codeclubs which are outside of school hours. Libre hardware/software would be nice to give out a community project: a bus countdown system, an irrigation,... children would be given different tasks: code, docs, research, hardware, installation,... -- -- Andres (he/him/his) Ham United Group Richmond Makerlabs _______________________________________________ Discussion mailing list Discussion@lists.fsfe.org https://lists.fsfe.org/mailman/listinfo/discussion