Patrick was challenging my consecutive post record, so I thought I should get something up quickly. Jaime writes -
Where can I find PyCrust? It would be very insteresting to put a link to it, together with links to PyGeo, Kirby's pages --and others that I must not be aware since I new to this list-- in a single page. Is there room for that in the edu SIG pages at python.org?
There are projects listed on the edu-sig page, but the page is quite stale and I'm not sure it is being maintained at all anymore. I've tried a number of times to have the PyGeo link and description corrected - but to no avail. There was an earlier PyOpenGL based PyGeo that predated VPython - plus the web site has changed. Besides liking for my own reasons to have the correct link, I do think dead links are embarassing and give a bad impression. But its not fully clear to me what you are hoping to do. But yes it would be great, I think, if we could have sort of a community site. (After we work on the community part some more). One subplot - As a community, there seems to me to be 2 fundamental threads - those who's specific interest is in a focused approach to teaching programming as a subject matter, and those who feel programming can also be introduced embedded in other curriculum, an enhancement to other curriculum - but with the programming understanding hopefully gained in the process something more than a side effect. One important thing those two schools of interest seem to have in common - Python! Sometimes not much elae. But that should be OK. Both schools of interest seem to conclude that Python has unique features to facilitate the learning process that they are interested in facilitating. And I don't think there should a problem defining this community broadly enough to be inclusive of these approaches. Art
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Arthur