
Hi Sergio, Seems to me the most effective way of " building a learning Python environment in the context on teaching and learning math at the elementary/high school level" would be to connect with existing efforts and contribute to them. As a full time teacher, I'm in a great place to test out materials with the group of people who matter most in all this, students / learners, but I have only limited time for contributing to the development process, so I need to keep my goals modest. The action is mainly taking place on http://jupyter.org, so the thing for me to do is learn this platform and join this community, and then contribute classroom ready resources to it. Cheers, Jeff Let's work together to create a just and sustainable world! ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ On June 13, 2018 9:12 AM, Sergio Rojas <sergio_r@mail.com> wrote:
Hi Jeff,
In relation to your call on
I would be delighted to see this mailing list be used for
collaboration and discussion around OER learning materials for Python.
Perhaps we could start making it more formally, in building a
learning Python environment in the context on teaching and learning
math at the elementary/high school level.
It seems that you already have a nice vigorous start up with your
colleagues and students which can bring this collaboration to an higher level.
revising the CSP openbook project
[ http://www.openbookproject.net/books/StudentCSP/index.html ].
I also wrote to Sebastian (cc this email to him) who has
good ideas on the same vein. Hopefully he might have some time to share
on getting something done in this endeavor.
Let me know when you feel you have something ready for testing.
It would be nice to hear recommendations for additions and modifications
to the content of the book and to the provided codes for each book.
At the moment I have not thought about the best way to add suggested
modifications to the respective book, directly by everyone, but
taken care that the project derive somewhere else.
Currently, I am revising the write up of the Prealgebra book
and trying to rewrite the codes in a more pythonic fashion, to add
a chapter on coding using pure python style to gain speed in code
execution.
Regards,
Sergio
Sent: Monday, June 11, 2018 at 11:15 AM
From: "Jeff Elkner" jeff@elkner.net
To: "Sergio Rojas" sergio_r@mail.com, "edu-sig@python.org" edu-sig@python.org
Subject: Collaboratively developing OER Python textbooks.
Hi Sergio,
I would be delighted to see this mailing list be used for collaboration and discussion around OER learning materials for Python.
I'm working on remixing a wonderful textbook written for use with the College Board's AP CS Principles course:
http://www.openbookproject.net/books/StudentCSP/
I've got the project on Gitlab at:
https://gitlab.com/jelkner/StudentCSP[https://gitlab.com/jelkner/StudentCSP]
Since students are the final judges of the effectiveness of education resources, I involve my students as testers / reviewers using issues tracking on Gitlab as the way for them to provide feedback. Shushantika Barua (cc'd here) proved an excellent proof reader / editor / tester. Taking a look at the issues she filed shows the process:
I have a friend and colleague, Isaac Zawolo (cc'd here) who teaches math at my school. We have been talking about integrating the learning of math and computer programming for several years. We also have a large community of first language Spanish speakers at our school.
So, Sergio, if you are interested, I would be glad to get my students involved in testing and contributing to both https://github.com/rojassergio/Prealgebra-via-Python-Programming[https://github.com/rojassergio/Prealgebra-via-Python-Programming] and https://github.com/rojassergio/Aprendiendo-a-programar-en-Python-con-mi-computador[https://github.com/rojassergio/Aprendiendo-a-programar-en-Python-con-mi-computador].
Let me know when you feel you have something ready for testing.
Thanks!
Jeff Elkner
Arlington Career Center, Arlington, VA
Let's work together to create a just and sustainable world!
‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐
On June 11, 2018 9:35 AM, Sergio Rojas sergio_r@mail.com wrote:
On 10/05/18 16:15, Jeff Elkner wrote:
Dear edu-sig friends,
We had an interesting discussion at the Education Summit today at
Pycon about ways to better engage folks between Pycons.
Hi Jeff,
Are the documents of the Pycon Education Summit available on the Internet?
As a public school teacher, I have a particular interest in python in
k12 institutions
How are you using Python in teaching and learning?
I finished a first crude draft of a book devoted mostly to Mathematics
(Prealgebra topics ) via Python
which I want to improve (in content and readability)
and perhaps the discussions of the Educational Summit
could be of help to better shape the book on the content of topics.
Regards,
Sergio
Message: 1
Date: Thu, 10 May 2018 17:15:28 -0400
From: Jeff Elkner jeff@elkner.net
To: "edu-sig@python.org" edu-sig@python.org
Subject: [Edu-sig] What do folks think of creating a #python-k12
channel on freenode?
Message-ID:
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Dear edu-sig friends,
We had an interesting discussion at the Education Summit today at
Pycon about ways to better engage folks between Pycons.
As a public school teacher, I have a particular interest in python in
k12 institutions, and in addition to posting more often on this list,
I am considering setting up an irc channel on freenode (#python-k12 ?)
Edu-sig mailing list
Edu-sig@python.org
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/edu-sig[https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/edu-sig]