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Re: [Omaha.pm] Perl student outreach



On Dec 11, 2008, at 7:28 PM, Eric Wilhelm wrote:
Hi Robert and Jay,

I read about your recent lightning talks and I'm very interested in what
is going on with Perl at UNO and in Omaha (as both the president of
pdx.pm and the Perl Foundation's administrator from Google's Summer of
Code 2008.)

They're Robert's lightning talks. I'm just the de-facto Omaha Perl Mongers (Omaha.pm) group leader. Due to a work emergency, I didn't even show up. I'm a slacker. :)

Jay, how is the attendance of students (and professors?) at Omaha.pm and
other local user groups?  Is your group doing anything to engage with
students?  Do you have any ideas about how .pm groups can do more to
reach out to universities?

I am the only Perl-centric regular attendee of our monthly Omaha.pm meetings. We hold them in conjunction with the Omaha Dynamic Language Users Group (ODynUG), so average attendance is ~10 people, talking about many different languages. Several months a year I do Perl project status update lightning talks at those meetings, and have done full Perl presentations a couple times.

As a general rule, no students or faculty attend those meetings, even though they're held in the same room that some UNO computer programming classes are taught and are officially sponsored by a faculty member.

I'm under the impression that one UNO prof attends the Python users group.

As a general rule it appears to me the overlap between academia and user group attendance is near zero.

But this apathy is not unique to academia. I continue to be surprised by the number of working stiffs like me who use open source tools daily but have never attended any relevant user group. It is certainly not that we don't have enough groups:

   http://jays.net/wiki/Omaha_User_Groups

My best guess at the psychology at work is that, academia or not, by the end of a day people have had quite enough computer junk in their lives, thank you, and have priorities other than tacking on more non- mandated geek time.

I invite everyone that ever breathes the word "Perl" within ear shot of me to come to our meetings. (I hand out Omaha.pm business cards.) I've done nothing else to "engage the students" or "reach out to universities."

What more could be done?

    Perhaps nothing?

-shrug-

HTH,

j