Request for GSoC Mentors 2016

Mentor Students. Make a difference.

Thank you for your interest in being a mentor for Google Summer of Code 2016! Mentoring is a rewarding way to give back to students new to software engineering, and your efforts give them a unique experience in learning open source software development during their university careers.

Before committing to be a mentor this year, please review the main Google Summer of Code (GSOC) page along with timeline and expectations of students. In order to assure a good experience for your student, be sure that you can commit to all of these expectations:

Expectations for Mentors

Before student selection

  1. Commit to spending a minimum of 4 hours each week to be available to guide and mentor students (not just your assigned student).
  2. Commit to being present in IRC and/or Telegram to help answer questions as much as your schedule allows, at a minimum of 4 hours each week.
  3. Prepare a good overview of your project idea(s) and have them linked to this wiki page.
  4. Watch OpenMRS Talk for questions about your project idea(s).
  5. Review student proposals and work with other mentors and organization admins to select the best candidates for OpenMRS.

After student selection

  1. Ensure your student is ready & active. They should have a dev environment, be regularly communicating in the community, and have prepared a project plan together with you. (See above for student expectations.)
  2. Read the GSoC Mentoring Manual and ask questions if you have them.
  3. Reach out to the Summer of Code organization administrators if you have questions or concerns.
  4. If the student is not active during the community bonding period, please contact the organization administrators.

During the program

  1. Help your student be successful. Commit to spending a minimum of 4 hours each week answering questions, giving advice, working with your student on blockers, and evaluating your student's progress.
  2. Complete a short "progress report" each week to help stay on schedule and catch potential problems early.
  3. Have fun and work hard! The highest-performing mentors will get an expenses-paid trip to Google's headquarters in October to geek out with fellow mentors from other open source projects.
  4. Schedule some time to chat 1-on-1 with your student to talk about their post-GSoC plans. Will they continue in their university program? Are they looking for a job? Help them understand the world beyond GSoC, and how they can continue contributing to OpenMRS.

After completing GSoC

  1. Stay in touch with your student and help them find interesting ways to stay involved with OpenMRS.
  2. Apply to attend the GSoC mentor summit in October! It's an awesome way to connect with other people in the open source world and have fun.

Current Proposed Mentors & Projects

Ready to go?

Please contact Suranga Kasthurirathne or Michael Downey to be granted permission to edit the Interns and Mentors 2016 page which is shown inline below, then edit the page to show your name, project idea(s) and backup mentors. This list will also be included in the main Google Summer of Code (GSOC) wiki page for students to review. Expect to be contacted as soon as your name is added. You will also be added to the mentors-only category on OpenMRS Talk for behind-the-scenes discussion about program operations.