Hi all,

My name is Mariana, I've been active in the NumFOCUS ecosystem as a 
developer for a few years and I'm a part of Jupyter's Distinguished 
Contributors.

I was told to circulate this idea in the Jupyter emailing list before 
moving forward with it. I'd like to apply for a NumFOCUS small development 
grant to run a one person three months long open source internship where I 
am the mentor.

The structure of the internship would be very similar to the one used in 
the outreachy <http://outreachy.org> program. Here's a simplified outline:

*Objective:* Improve the software quality of Jupyter's expanded universe 
while at the same time introducing and fostering diversity in the open 
science ecosystem 
*Focus group:* People who face systemic bias or discrimination in the 
technology industry of their country and come from disadvantaged 
socioeconomic backgrounds [1] 
*Work scope:* Fix general bugs, add features (tests, greater integration 
with the rest of NumFOCUS' software stack), system's redesign (propose 
better API design, etc). The proposed projects are: ipycytoscape 
<https://github.com/cytoscape/ipycytoscape>, any of the xeus kernels 
<https://github.com/jupyter-xeus>, but I'm also open for tackling other 
projects here, please see [2] 
*Internship duration:* 3 months, 30h work/week [3] 
*Deliverables:* Two blog posts that are somehow related to the work of the 
intern in the project. A number of issues solved and improved software for 
Jupyter. 
*Grant breakdown: *7000 USD - Intern salary [4] 1000 USD - Travel stipend 
[5]

Finally, I’m open to adopt other formats, in case someone would like to 
pick up on mentoring, for example, or be paid for it, we could increase the 
amount of money we’re asking in the grant.

I’m also very happy to hear about other grants or ideas on how to expand 
this project. I’m a member of NumFOCUS DISC committee and several people 
inside the organization support this idea.

If you're part of the Executive Council Members the Software Council 
Members, I'd especially like to hear from you. I'm also interested in the 
broader spectrum of what Jupyter's community have to say about it. I'm very 
open to constructive criticism and would love to discuss the idea further 
with you. I'd like to propose this for the next funding round which give us 
the deadline of June 2, 2023.

[1] I'm not sure how to make this process both dignifying and transparent 
to the people who apply. I think defining what is "disadvantaged 
socioeconomic background" is really hard. Right now I'm thinking of a) 
making it clear in the registration process b) when the candidate is chosen 
I'll ask them some sort of income proof and do my best to google if their 
income matches the murky "disadvantaged socioeconomic background" 
definition. If it does, they will be accepted. 
[2] The reason why I chose these projects is because I'm a core contributor 
in them and know them well. I know the scope of these projects is quite 
small, they have at most a few thousand lines of code and offer a challenge 
that's not too big nor too small for the intern. However, if the broader 
community think other projects should be considered I'm happy to 
re-evaluate. 
[3] These numbers are copied from outreachy 
[4] This salary might strike some people as quite high for an internship, 
especially if we might be focusing in developing countries or 
"disadvantaged socioeconomic background" people. However, I have a few 
arguments to advocate for such this salary: first this value is copied 
directly from outreachy's website and here there are two main points a) 
outreachy has been running for more than five years now and has introduced 
several folks from diverse backgrounds into open source successfully. b) as 
a past outreachy intern myself and knowing several other people who were 
part of the project, this somewhat large amount of money was what made it 
possible for us to catapult our careers and safely ensure us time and 
confidence to keep pursuing software development as a profession, either by 
moving countries or allowing us to focus on learning. Second, if you're 
interested in research done holding somewhat similar contexts in mind, you 
can find research under the give directly 
<https://www.givedirectly.org/research-at-give-directly/> website, or the 
research of the economist and public policy analyst Jeffrey Sachs 
<https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=0PK2JtIAAAAJ&hl=en> advising at 
the UN. I'm not sure if this is the best way, but it's something that seems 
worked in the past. Besides, as you can see, I'm doing this in a voluntary 
basis and I don't have the capacity to take on another intern. Even if we 
could have 2 or more interns with one grant I wouldn't be able to mentor 
them.
[5] One of the biggest values for the intern from this tiny program would 
be the ability to network, therefore I'd like this person to travel to 
Europe (because it's where I'm located and it's easier for me to attend a 
conference in Europe) and attend one of the NumFOCUS relevant conferences. 
If they can get a free ticket and me too it'd be even better! My traveling 
costs would be covered by myself and the intern's by the 1000USD stipend.

Thanks, 
Wishing everyone the best,

- mariana meireles

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