Difference between revisions of "Deployment Team/Small deployment guide"

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If a  LiveUSB image can be given to each teacher and child:
 
If a  LiveUSB image can be given to each teacher and child:
 
# They can use the image both at school and at home; and
 
# They can use the image both at school and at home; and
 
 
# Through a shared ejabber server, they can collaborate as a class even when they are at home.
 
# Through a shared ejabber server, they can collaborate as a class even when they are at home.
  

Revision as of 17:29, 27 September 2008

This article is a stub. You can help Sugar Labs by expanding it.

Introduction

Getting started with Sugar

Getting Sugar into your classroom or community

For starters you will need some sugar live CDs or live USB, this could be of great help in doing introductions to Sugar.

If a LiveUSB image can be given to each teacher and child:

  1. They can use the image both at school and at home; and
  2. Through a shared ejabber server, they can collaborate as a class even when they are at home.

Tip: In order to reduce wear and tear on your computer's USB drive, use a USB extension cable. This moves the wear to a replaceable part and has the added advantage of making the USB connection more accessible.

Getting connected to the Sugar community

Sugar and OLPC Mailists, IRCs (#sugar, #sugar-meeting @ freenode), Meet local Comunities of developers, teachers and students.

20 quick learning ideas to try with Sugar

  • Sharing Activities
  • Journaling
  • Gaming
  • Programing with pippy and etoys.
  • Turtle Art
  • Using mails (gmail activity)
  • Gcompris
  • Other activities.

Small workshops with parents and teachers

Advantages and disadvantages of Sugar

Why Sugar?

  • Sugar comes with hundreds of tools for discovery through exploring, expressing, and sharing:
    • Web browsing; reading; chatting; playing movies and music; playing games; word processing; reflecting and assessment (Journal)‏; creating graphics; creating rich media; and programming.
  • Sugar comes with a built-in collaboration system:
    • It features collaboration with or without Internet access.
    • Benefits of Sugar include peer-to-peer learning; always-on support; and single-click sharing [Should we trademark these terms? :)]
  • Sugar comes with built-in tools for reflection:
    • Features include an auto-generated journal (all your work is auto-saved and can be annotated and tagged).
    • Benefits of the Sugar Journal are that it serves as a portfolio assessment tool, a place of reflection, and a forum for discussion between children, their parents, and their teachers.
  • The Sugar learning platform is discoverable:
    • It features a scalable interaction model that is iconic and discoverable through hover menus:
    • Benefits include that you don't need to learn everything at once—you can progress, using simple means to reach to complex ends: no upper bound on where you can reach.
  • Sugar is designed for local appropriation:
    • It features free and open-source software, a view-source mechanism, and built-in tools for making changes and improvements.
    • Benefits include a growing global community of support;
  • Sugar puts an emphasis on learning through doing and debugging:
    • Benefits include a more engaged learner able to tackle authentic problems.
  • Sugar is available in a wide variety of forms:
    • Getting Sugar for Fedora, Ubuntu, or Debian.
    • Run Sugar in an emulator: QEMU or VMWare.
    • Run Sugar from a LiveCD or Live USB.