Webmaker/Mentor
< Webmaker
What are we doing?
- Supporting mentors everywhere
- to rip, remix and repost web learning content
- in a peer community and in their city
- so they can help people they care about
- make amazing things using the web
Who are we talking about?
We see the mentor community as the intersection of:
- Makers interested in learning
- Educators interested in making
For example:
- A hackerspace founder interested in running HTML courses
- A museum director interested in a digital making program
These two groups, makers and educators, are situated in two larger movements:
- the "Maker Movement": with a DIY ethos and an "If you can't open it, you don't own it" approach. A strong culture of documentation and sharing, collaboration and remixing. Has roots in physical spaces and physical objects, but important ties to the web. Examples include: Maker Faire, hackerspaces, tinkerers in electronics, 3D printing, CNC and more.
- the "Learning Movement": challenges traditional education with its learner-centric, web-inspired approach to learning. A strong culture of peer learning, open course materials, and new kinds of assessment. Has roots in peer production, participation, networks of institutions & learners. Examples include: Massive Open Online Courses, YOUMedia spaces, instructors from computer clubs and more.
What will we do together?
- This group will be a skunkworks incubator for radical ideas about learning, webmaking and mentoring.
- It will be powered by a Github for Learning Stuff, an open repository where mentors can rip, remix and repost materials.
- Driven by the interests of the mentors, we'll run webmaking campaigns, train the trainer workshops, and other activities that grow this community.
- In cities where mentors and institutions want to team up, we'll help bring new Hive learning networks online. Hives are vibrant learning clusters in a city; they are labs and a place to see "making is learning" in action.
- The group will be dedicated to documentation and on-boarding new mentors, and aim for many processes to be easily replicable, remixable and teachable.
What needs to be done?
Local maker and mentor communities help:
- Create, test and localize hacktivity kits
- Develop a mentorship program and offer in-person trainings and workshops
- Design webmaking events, including learning campaigns (SCP, Hive Learning Networks) & marquee events (Mozfest, Hive Pop-Ups)
We also need to build in:
- A "Github for learning assets" (production platform for remixable hacktivites and resources)
- Communication channels (groups on webmaker.org, social sites)
- Badges (recognition of achievement such as Webmaker Maker and third-party badges)
- Celebration (incentive structure, inc. travel to Mozfest, stories/work highlighted, reputationaly earned contribution access)