Amdahl's Law and Software Carpentry
To give you some idea of what goes on behind the scenes, here's what my week looks like:
Hours | Activity | Notes |
---|---|---|
11.0 | Board discussions | Drawing up by-laws, hammering out a funding model, etc. |
10.0 | Other email | Questions about teaching, managing assessment, extracting Git history, etc. |
8.0 | Instructor training | Real-time contact hours, demo teaching, and email |
6.0 | Discussions with potential partners and funders | Some live, some by email |
5.5 | Writing/reviewing grant proposals | Some for us, some for partners |
4.0 | Writing and revising blog posts | Like this one |
3.0 | Coordinating workshops | Arliss and Giacomo handle most of it, but there are always things left over |
2.5 | Record keeping | Managing our list of who taught where, who's signed up for instructor training, etc. |
2.5 | Reviewing pull requests | Should be a lot more |
2.0 | Research projects | The code review study, the language comparison study, etc. |
2.0 | Technical support | Git issues, mailing list issues, web site issues, etc. |
1.0 | Writing letters of reference | Saying nice things about our instructors is the least I can do to thank them |
That's 57.5 hours in a week in which I'm not traveling or teaching workshops, and still doesn't include things that are vital to Software Carpentry's long-term health, like writing notes for instructor training, refining the template for new lessons, translating existing lessons into that format, building a tool to check that they conform to our style guide, experimenting with a better build system for workshop websites, and a dozen other things. Asking volunteers to do these things isn't a solution: many of these activities are administrative, have long lead times, and require sustained attention over a period of months, so like any non-profit, we need some full-time staff in the center for continuity.
And that means raising money, not just for my salary (since I've been working pro bono since the start of this month), but also to hire at least one more person to share the load. We also need more institutional partners to provide staff for coordinating workshops in the way that Arliss Collins and Giacomo Peru have been doing.
We can offer sponsors and partners several things in return: an agreed number of workshops each year, on-site instructor training, and help with recruiting and publicity for sponsor activities. They will also have a say in our direction: we're still working on the details, but organizations that back us will be represented on our board and be able to shape what we do and how we do it. If this sounds interesting, please get in touch. We'd welcome a chance to talk about ways and means.