(This template is for students applying to summer code programs with Public Lab. Use this link to...
Public Lab is an open community which collaboratively develops accessible, open source, Do-It-Yourself technologies for investigating local environmental health and justice issues.
14 CURRENT | warren |
January 31, 2019 20:11
| almost 6 years ago
(This template is for students applying to summer code programs with Public Lab. Use this link to start writing a post: https://publiclab.org/post?n=899&tags=soc,soc-2019,soc-2019-proposals You can delete this line once you've started filling it out.) About meTell us about yourself! Affiliation (organization/school -- optional!) Location: (generally where you are, no exact locations please!) Project descriptionHere, you don't have to have a complete proposal when you begin. Just tell us some of your ideas and we'll help you refine it into a full proposal gradually! Abstract/summary (<20 words):ProblemWhat problem(s) does your project solve? Timeline/milestonesBreak your project up into small projects -- one per week! See this page for guidance on breaking your plan up into small, self-contained parts: https://publiclab.org/notes/warren/01-18-2018/software-outreach-modularity-is-great-for-collaboration NeedsWhat resources will you need: people, documentation, literature, sample data, hardware if applicable First-time contribution_Have you looked over our welcome page and are you familiar with how to make your first contribution? Have you already made it? We're eager to see that you've had a good experience making a small initial contribution to our site. Please check out our welcoming page: _ https://code.publiclab.org/#r=all And paste in links to your initial contributions here so we can see! You can use links like these to show recent activity:
ExperienceTell us how you've learned about writing software; what languages you've been learning, if you've worked on other projects, links to GitHub or other code repositories or samples. TeamworkDescribe teams you've worked with before, whether open or closed source, and in what capacity you participated. Cite examples of how you were self-motivated and self-sufficient. PassionWhat about our projects, and Public Lab, interests you? What are you passionate about? Open science, environmental justice? AudienceWhom do you want your work to help? We especially appreciate proposals which make technologies and techniques more welcoming and friendly to those who've often been excluded. CommitmentDo you understand this is a serious commitment, equivalent to a full-time summer job? Tell us how you'll structure your schedule from day to day! |
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13 | warren |
January 31, 2019 20:08
| almost 6 years ago
(This template is for students applying to summer code programs with Public Lab. Use this link to start writing a post: https://publiclab.org/post?n=899&tags=soc,soc-2019,soc-2019-proposals You can delete this line once you've started filling it out.) About meTell us about yourself! Affiliation (organization/school, if any) Location: (generally where you are) Project descriptionHere, you don't have to have a complete proposal when you begin. Just tell us some of your ideas and we'll help you refine it into a full proposal gradually! Abstract/summary (<20 words):ProblemWhat problem(s) does your project solve? Timeline/milestonesBreak your project up into small projects -- one per week! See this page for guidance on breaking your plan up into small, self-contained parts: https://publiclab.org/notes/warren/01-18-2018/software-outreach-modularity-is-great-for-collaboration NeedsWhat resources will you need: people, documentation, literature, sample data, hardware if applicable First-time contribution_Have you looked over our welcome page and are you familiar with how to make your first contribution? Have you already made it? We're eager to see that you've had a good experience making a small initial contribution to our site. Please check out our welcoming page: _ https://code.publiclab.org/#r=all And paste in links to your initial contributions here so we can see! ExperienceTell us how you've learned about writing software; what languages you've been learning, if you've worked on other projects, links to GitHub or other code repositories or samples. TeamworkDescribe teams you've worked with before, whether open or closed source, and in what capacity you participated. Cite examples of how you were self-motivated and self-sufficient. PassionWhat about our projects, and Public Lab, interests you? What are you passionate about? Open science, environmental justice? AudienceWhom do you want your work to help? We especially appreciate proposals which make technologies and techniques more welcoming and friendly to those who've often been excluded. CommitmentDo you understand this is a serious commitment, equivalent to a full-time summer job? Tell us how you'll structure your schedule from day to day! |
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12 | warren |
February 17, 2018 01:15
| almost 7 years ago
(This template is for students applying to summer code programs with Public Lab. Use this link to start writing a post: https://publiclab.org/post?n=899&tags=soc,soc-2018,soc-2018-proposals You can delete this line once you've started filling it out.) About meTell us about yourself! Affiliation (organization/school, if any) Location: (generally where you are) Project descriptionHere, you don't have to have a complete proposal when you begin. Just tell us some of your ideas and we'll help you refine it into a full proposal gradually! Abstract/summary (<20 words):ProblemWhat problem(s) does your project solve? Timeline/milestonesBreak your project up into small projects -- one per week! See this page for guidance on breaking your plan up into small, self-contained parts: https://publiclab.org/notes/warren/01-18-2018/software-outreach-modularity-is-great-for-collaboration NeedsWhat resources will you need: people, documentation, literature, sample data, hardware if applicable First-time contribution_Have you looked over our welcome page and are you familiar with how to make your first contribution? Have you already made it? We're eager to see that you've had a good experience making a small initial contribution to our site. Please check out our welcoming page: _ https://publiclab.github.io/community-toolbox/#r=all And paste in links to your initial contributions here so we can see! ExperienceTell us how you've learned about writing software; what languages you've been learning, if you've worked on other projects, links to GitHub or other code repositories or samples. TeamworkDescribe teams you've worked with before, whether open or closed source, and in what capacity you participated. Cite examples of how you were self-motivated and self-sufficient. PassionWhat about our projects, and Public Lab, interests you? What are you passionate about? Open science, environmental justice? AudienceWhom do you want your work to help? We especially appreciate proposals which make technologies and techniques more welcoming and friendly to those who've often been excluded. CommitmentDo you understand this is a serious commitment, equivalent to a full-time summer job? Tell us how you'll structure your schedule from day to day! |
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11 | warren |
February 28, 2017 20:02
| almost 8 years ago
(This template is for students applying to summer code programs with Public Lab. Use this link to start writing a post: https://publiclab.org/post?n=899&tags=gsoc,gsoc-2017-proposals You can delete this line once you've started filling it out.) About meTell us about yourself! Affiliation (organization/school, if any) Location: (generally where you are) Project descriptionHere, you don't have to have a complete proposal when you begin. Just tell us some of your ideas and we'll help you refine it into a full proposal gradually! Abstract/summary (<20 words):ProblemWhat problem does your project solve? Timeline/milestonesBreak your project up into small projects -- one per week! NeedsWhat resources will you need: people, documentation, literature, sample data, hardware if applicable SetupHave you forked the relevant codebases? Installed them in a dev environment such as Cloud9.io? Need help doing so? Please provide a link to each of the above. ExperienceTell us how you've learned about writing software; what languages you've been learning, if you've worked on other projects, links to GitHub or other code repositories or samples. Have you looked over our welcome page and are you familiar with how to make your first contribution? Have you already? TeamworkDescribe teams you've worked with before, whether open or closed source, and in what capacity you participated. Cite examples of how you were self-motivated and self-sufficient. PassionWhat about our projects, and Public Lab, interests you? What are you passionate about? Open science, environmental justice? AudienceWhom do you want your work to help? We especially appreciate proposals which make technologies and techniques more welcoming and friendly to those who've often been excluded. CommitmentDo you understand this is a serious commitment, equivalent to a full-time summer job? Tell us how you'll structure your schedule from day to day! |
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10 | warren |
February 28, 2017 19:58
| almost 8 years ago
(This template is for students applying to summer code programs with Public Lab. Use this link to start writing a post: https://publiclab.org/post?n=899 You can delete this line once you've started filling it out.) About meTell us about yourself! Affiliation (organization/school, if any) Location: (generally where you are) Project descriptionHere, you don't have to have a complete proposal when you begin. Just tell us some of your ideas and we'll help you refine it into a full proposal gradually! Abstract/summary (<20 words):ProblemWhat problem does your project solve? Timeline/milestonesBreak your project up into small projects -- one per week! NeedsWhat resources will you need: people, documentation, literature, sample data, hardware if applicable SetupHave you forked the relevant codebases? Installed them in a dev environment such as Cloud9.io? Need help doing so? Please provide a link to each of the above. ExperienceTell us how you've learned about writing software; what languages you've been learning, if you've worked on other projects, links to GitHub or other code repositories or samples. Have you looked over our welcome page and are you familiar with how to make your first contribution? Have you already? TeamworkDescribe teams you've worked with before, whether open or closed source, and in what capacity you participated. Cite examples of how you were self-motivated and self-sufficient. PassionWhat about our projects, and Public Lab, interests you? What are you passionate about? Open science, environmental justice? AudienceWhom do you want your work to help? We especially appreciate proposals which make technologies and techniques more welcoming and friendly to those who've often been excluded. CommitmentDo you understand this is a serious commitment, equivalent to a full-time summer job? Tell us how you'll structure your schedule from day to day! |
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9 | warren |
February 28, 2017 19:58
| almost 8 years ago
(This template is for students applying to summer code programs with Public Lab. Use this link to start writing a post: https://publiclab.org/post?n=899 You can delete this line once you've started filling it out.) About meTell us about yourself! Affiliation (organization/school, if any) Location: (generally where you are) Project descriptionHere, you don't have to have a complete proposal when you begin. Just tell us some of your ideas and we'll help you refine it into a full proposal gradually! Abstract/summary (<20 words):ProblemWhat problem does your project solve? Timeline/milestonesBreak your project up into small projects -- one per week! NeedsWhat resources will you need: people, documentation, literature, sample data, hardware if applicable SetupHave you forked the relevant codebases? Installed them in a dev environment such as Cloud9.io? Need help doing so? Please provide a link to each of the above. ExperienceTell us how you've learned about writing software; what languages you've been learning, if you've worked on other projects, links to GitHub or other code repositories or samples. Have you looked over our welcome page and are you familiar with how to make your first contribution? Have you already? TeamworkDescribe teams you've worked with before, whether open or closed source, and in what capacity you participated. Cite examples of how you were self-motivated and self-sufficient. PassionWhat about our projects, and Public Lab, interests you? What are you passionate about? Open science, environmental justice? AudienceWhom do you want your work to help? We especially appreciate proposals which make technologies and techniques more welcoming and friendly to those who've often been excluded. CommitmentDo you understand this is a serious commitment, equivalent to a full-time summer job? Tell us how you'll structure your schedule from day to day! |
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8 | warren |
February 28, 2017 19:56
| almost 8 years ago
(This template is for students applying to the GSoC program with Public Lab.) About meTell us about yourself! Affiliation (organization/school, if any) Location: (generally where you are) Project descriptionHere, you don't have to have a complete proposal when you begin. Just tell us some of your ideas and we'll help you refine it into a full proposal gradually! Abstract/summary (<20 words):ProblemWhat problem does your project solve? Timeline/milestonesBreak your project up into small projects -- one per week! NeedsWhat resources will you need: people, documentation, literature, sample data, hardware if applicable SetupHave you forked the relevant codebases? Installed them in a dev environment such as Cloud9.io? Need help doing so? Please provide a link to each of the above. ExperienceTell us how you've learned about writing software; what languages you've been learning, if you've worked on other projects, links to GitHub or other code repositories or samples. Have you looked over our welcome page and are you familiar with how to make your first contribution? Have you already? TeamworkDescribe teams you've worked with before, whether open or closed source, and in what capacity you participated. Cite examples of how you were self-motivated and self-sufficient. PassionWhat about our projects, and Public Lab, interests you? What are you passionate about? Open science, environmental justice? AudienceWhom do you want your work to help? We especially appreciate proposals which make technologies and techniques more welcoming and friendly to those who've often been excluded. CommitmentDo you understand this is a serious commitment, equivalent to a full-time summer job? Tell us how you'll structure your schedule from day to day! |
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7 | warren |
February 28, 2017 18:59
| almost 8 years ago
(This template is for students applying to the GSoC program with Public Lab.) TemplateName: Affiliation (school/degree) Location (where you are): Email: Phone: (if you prefer not to post it here, please email it to organizers@publiclab.org with a link to your application.) Project(s) you're working on or want to, i.e. Spectral Workbench or MapKnitter: Project title -- the title of YOUR proposed project: Project description
SetupHave you forked the relevant codebases? Installed them in a dev environment such as Cloud9.io? Need help doing so? Please provide a link to each of the above. ExperienceDescribe your technical background; what languages you use, what projects you've contributed to before, links to GitHub or other code repositories or samples. Have you read the Contributor Guidelines at https://publiclab.org/wiki/contributing-to-public-lab-software and are you comfortable submitting pull requests? TeamworkDescribe teams you've worked with before, whether open or closed source, and in what capacity you participated. Cite examples of how you were self-motivated and self-sufficient. ExpertiseWould you describe yourself as especially good at or interested in some aspect of coding or problem solving, or open source science? Provide examples and links. Are you particularly suited to this proposed project? InterestDo you have prior interest in or work towards open science or environmental justice goals? AudienceWhom will your work serve? Lay users, other programmers, non-technical people or nerds? While exploring advanced techniques is great, we especially appreciate proposals which make technologies and techniques more legible and user-friendly to non-technical users. ContextWhat motivates you to do the proposed work? Do you also have coursework or degree related reasons for pursuing it? This wouldn't necessarily be a bad thing - if you are for example looking to explore work related to a thesis topic. Ongoing involvementExplain how you intend to continue being an active member of your project and/or Public Laboratory AFTER the summer is over. CommitmentDo you understand this is a serious commitment, equivalent to a full-time paid summer internship or summer job? |
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6 | warren |
February 28, 2017 18:42
| almost 8 years ago
(This template is for students applying to the GSoC program with Public Lab.) View the markup here to copy into your post: https://publiclab.org/notes/raw/899 TemplateName: Affiliation (school/degree) Location (where you are): Email: Phone: (if you prefer not to post it here, please email it to organizers@publiclab.org with a link to your application.) Project(s) you're working on or want to, i.e. Spectral Workbench or MapKnitter: Project title -- the title of YOUR proposed project: Project description
SetupHave you forked the relevant codebases? Installed them in a dev environment such as Cloud9.io? Need help doing so? Please provide a link to each of the above. ExperienceDescribe your technical background; what languages you use, what projects you've contributed to before, links to GitHub or other code repositories or samples. Have you read the Contributor Guidelines at https://publiclab.org/wiki/contributing-to-public-lab-software and are you comfortable submitting pull requests? TeamworkDescribe teams you've worked with before, whether open or closed source, and in what capacity you participated. Cite examples of how you were self-motivated and self-sufficient. ExpertiseWould you describe yourself as especially good at or interested in some aspect of coding or problem solving, or open source science? Provide examples and links. Are you particularly suited to this proposed project? InterestDo you have prior interest in or work towards open science or environmental justice goals? AudienceWhom will your work serve? Lay users, other programmers, non-technical people or nerds? While exploring advanced techniques is great, we especially appreciate proposals which make technologies and techniques more legible and user-friendly to non-technical users. ContextWhat motivates you to do the proposed work? Do you also have coursework or degree related reasons for pursuing it? This wouldn't necessarily be a bad thing - if you are for example looking to explore work related to a thesis topic. Ongoing involvementExplain how you intend to continue being an active member of your project and/or Public Laboratory AFTER the summer is over. CommitmentDo you understand this is a serious commitment, equivalent to a full-time paid summer internship or summer job? |
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5 | warren |
March 10, 2016 19:52
| almost 9 years ago
This template is for students applying to the GSoC program with Public Lab. Please copy it in order to make your own proposals. View the markup here to copy into your post: https://publiclab.org/notes/raw/899 TemplateName: Affiliation (school/degree) Location (where you are): Email: Phone: (if you prefer not to post it here, please email it to organizers@publiclab.org with a link to your application.) Project(s) you're working on or want to, i.e. Spectral Workbench or MapKnitter: Project title -- the title of YOUR proposed project: Project description
SetupHave you forked the relevant codebases? Installed them in a dev environment such as Cloud9.io? Need help doing so? Please provide a link to each of the above. ExperienceDescribe your technical background; what languages you use, what projects you've contributed to before, links to GitHub or other code repositories or samples. Have you read the Contributor Guidelines at https://publiclab.org/wiki/contributing-to-public-lab-software and are you comfortable submitting pull requests? TeamworkDescribe teams you've worked with before, whether open or closed source, and in what capacity you participated. Cite examples of how you were self-motivated and self-sufficient. ExpertiseWould you describe yourself as especially good at or interested in some aspect of coding or problem solving, or open source science? Provide examples and links. Are you particularly suited to this proposed project? InterestDo you have prior interest in or work towards open science or environmental justice goals? AudienceWhom will your work serve? Lay users, other programmers, non-technical people or nerds? While exploring advanced techniques is great, we especially appreciate proposals which make technologies and techniques more legible and user-friendly to non-technical users. ContextWhat motivates you to do the proposed work? Do you also have coursework or degree related reasons for pursuing it? This wouldn't necessarily be a bad thing - if you are for example looking to explore work related to a thesis topic. Ongoing involvementExplain how you intend to continue being an active member of your project and/or Public Laboratory AFTER the summer is over. CommitmentDo you understand this is a serious commitment, equivalent to a full-time paid summer internship or summer job? |
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4 | warren |
March 10, 2016 19:31
| almost 9 years ago
This template is for students applying to the GSoC program with Public Lab. Please copy it in order to make your own proposals. View the markup here to copy into your post: https://publiclab.org/notes/raw/899 TemplateName: Affiliation (school/degree) Location (where you are): Email: Phone: (if you prefer not to post it here, please email it to organizers@publiclab.org with a link to your application.) Project(s) you're working on or want to, i.e. Spectral Workbench or MapKnitter: Project title -- the title of YOUR proposed project: Project description
ExperienceDescribe your technical background; what languages you use, what projects you've contributed to before, links to GitHub or other code repositories or samples TeamworkDescribe teams you've worked with before, whether open or closed source, and in what capacity you participated. Cite examples of how you were self-motivated and self-sufficient. ExpertiseWould you describe yourself as especially good at or interested in some aspect of coding or problem solving, or open source science? Provide examples and links. Are you particularly suited to this proposed project? InterestDo you have prior interest in or work towards open science or environmental justice goals? AudienceWhom will your work serve? Lay users, other programmers, non-technical people or nerds? While exploring advanced techniques is great, we especially appreciate proposals which make technologies and techniques more legible and user-friendly to non-technical users. ContextWhat motivates you to do the proposed work? Do you also have coursework or degree related reasons for pursuing it? This wouldn't necessarily be a bad thing - if you are for example looking to explore work related to a thesis topic. Ongoing involvementExplain how you intend to continue being an active member of your project and/or Public Laboratory AFTER the summer is over. CommitmentDo you understand this is a serious commitment, equivalent to a full-time paid summer internship or summer job? |
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3 | warren |
March 10, 2016 19:31
| almost 9 years ago
This template is for students applying to the GSoC program with Public Lab. Please copy it in order to make your own proposals. View the markup here to copy into your post: https://publiclab.org/notes/raw/899 TemplateName: Affiliation (school/degree) Location (where you are): Email: Phone: (if you prefer not to post it here, please email it to organizers@publiclaboratory.org with a link to your application.) Project(s) you're working on or want to, i.e. Spectral Workbench or MapKnitter: Project title -- the title of YOUR proposed project: Project description
ExperienceDescribe your technical background; what languages you use, what projects you've contributed to before, links to GitHub or other code repositories or samples TeamworkDescribe teams you've worked with before, whether open or closed source, and in what capacity you participated. Cite examples of how you were self-motivated and self-sufficient. ExpertiseWould you describe yourself as especially good at or interested in some aspect of coding or problem solving, or open source science? Provide examples and links. Are you particularly suited to this proposed project? InterestDo you have prior interest in or work towards open science or environmental justice goals? AudienceWhom will your work serve? Lay users, other programmers, non-technical people or nerds? While exploring advanced techniques is great, we especially appreciate proposals which make technologies and techniques more legible and user-friendly to non-technical users. ContextWhat motivates you to do the proposed work? Do you also have coursework or degree related reasons for pursuing it? This wouldn't necessarily be a bad thing - if you are for example looking to explore work related to a thesis topic. Ongoing involvementExplain how you intend to continue being an active member of your project and/or Public Laboratory AFTER the summer is over. CommitmentDo you understand this is a serious commitment, equivalent to a full-time paid summer internship or summer job? |
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2 | liz |
April 12, 2013 17:34
| over 11 years ago
This template is for students applying to the GSoC program with Public Laboratory. Please copy it in order to make your own proposals. TemplateName: Affiliation (school/degree) Location (where you are): Email: Phone: (if you prefer not to post it here, please email it to organizers@publiclaboratory.org with a link to your application.) Project(s) you're working on or want to, i.e. Spectral Workbench or MapKnitter: Project title -- the title of YOUR proposed project: Project description
Experience: Describe your technical background; what languages you use, what projects you've contributed to before, links to GitHub or other code repositories or samples Teamwork Describe teams you've worked with before, whether open or closed source, and in what capacity you participated. Cite examples of how you were self-motivated and self-sufficient. Expertise Would you describe yourself as especially good at or interested in some aspect of coding or problem solving, or open source science? Provide examples and links. Are you particularly suited to this proposed project? Interest Do you have prior interest in or work towards open science or environmental justice goals? Audience Whom will your work serve? Lay users, other programmers, non-technical people or nerds? While exploring advanced techniques is great, we especially appreciate proposals which make technologies and techniques more legible and user-friendly to non-technical users. Context What motivates you to do the proposed work? Do you also have coursework or degree related reasons for pursuing it? This wouldn't necessarily be a bad thing - if you are for example looking to explore work related to a thesis topic. Ongoing involvement Explain how you intend to continue being an active member of your project and/or Public Laboratory AFTER the summer is over. Commitment Do you understand this is a serious commitment, equivalent to a full-time paid summer internship or summer job? |
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1 | warren |
March 08, 2012 15:26
| almost 13 years ago
This template is for students applying to the GSoC program with Public Laboratory. Please copy it in order to make your own proposals. TemplateName: Affiliation (school/degree) Location (where you are): Email: Phone: (if you prefer not to post it here, please email it to team@publiclaboratory.org with a link to your application.) Project(s) you're working on or want to, i.e. Spectral Workbench or MapKnitter: Project title -- the title of YOUR proposed project: Project description
Experience: Describe your technical background; what languages you use, what projects you've contributed to before, links to GitHub or other code repositories or samples Teamwork Describe teams you've worked with before, whether open or closed source, and in what capacity you participated. Cite examples of how you were self-motivated and self-sufficient. Expertise Would you describe yourself as especially good at or interested in some aspect of coding or problem solving, or open source science? Provide examples and links. Are you particularly suited to this proposed project? Interest Do you have prior interest in or work towards open science or environmental justice goals? Audience Whom will your work serve? Lay users, other programmers, non-technical people or nerds? While exploring advanced techniques is great, we especially appreciate proposals which make technologies and techniques more legible and user-friendly to non-technical users. Context What motivates you to do the proposed work? Do you also have coursework or degree related reasons for pursuing it? This wouldn't necessarily be a bad thing - if you are for example looking to explore work related to a thesis topic. Ongoing involvement Explain how you intend to continue being an active member of your project and/or Public Laboratory AFTER the summer is over. Commitment Do you understand this is a serious commitment, equivalent to a full-time paid summer internship or summer job? |
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0 | warren |
March 07, 2012 22:02
| almost 13 years ago
This template is for students applying to the GSoC program with Public Laboratory. Please copy it in order to make your own proposals. TemplateName: Affiliation (school/degree) Location (where you are): Email: Phone: Project(s) you're working on or want to, i.e. Spectral Workbench or MapKnitter: Project title -- the title of YOUR proposed project: Project description
Experience: Describe your technical background; what languages you use, what projects you've contributed to before, links to GitHub or other code repositories or samples Teamwork Describe teams you've worked with before, whether open or closed source, and in what capacity you participated. Cite examples of how you were self-motivated and self-sufficient. Expertise Would you describe yourself as especially good at or interested in some aspect of coding or problem solving, or open source science? Provide examples and links. Are you particularly suited to this proposed project? Interest Do you have prior interest in or work towards open science or environmental justice goals? Audience Whom will your work serve? Lay users, other programmers, non-technical people or nerds? While exploring advanced techniques is great, we especially appreciate proposals which make technologies and techniques more legible and user-friendly to non-technical users. Context What motivates you to do the proposed work? Do you also have coursework or degree related reasons for pursuing it? This wouldn't necessarily be a bad thing - if you are for example looking to explore work related to a thesis topic. Ongoing involvement Explain how you intend to continue being an active member of your project and/or Public Laboratory AFTER the summer is over. Commitment Do you understand this is a serious commitment, equivalent to a full-time paid summer internship or summer job? |
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