Workshop Instructor Guidelines: Difference between revisions

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Guidelines For a Good Workshop at HackRVA




*Workshops should be a Hands-On event.
*Workshops should be a hands-on event (lecture-only style doesn't work well - if you want to give a talk, cool - that's different though.
*Workshops should have something started (preferably completed) by the end.
*Workshops should have something started (preferably completed) by the end.
*Workshops seem to do best around 2 hours.
*Workshops seem to do best around 2-3 hours.
*Limit the number of attendees to a reasonable amount. About 10 seems to be an upper limit.
*Workshops tend to be on Saturday or Sunday from/between 10am-1pm (they can start earlier or alter, but can't go beyond 1pm on weekends - those are freehack times). Weeknights can also work.
*Practice a couple of times first. Pacing is hard to guess at.
*Limit the number of attendees to a reasonable amount. About 10 seems to be an upper limit for most things.
*Materials and supplies are typically paid for out of pocket, but can be recouped through workshop fees. Meetup now supports required payment through Wepay. Remember to account for merchant fees and consider building in a reasonable donation to the space in the fee. [[Michael]] Lane can help with determining a reasonable fee.
*Consider tool limitations as well - wood working tends to only be 5 people because we don't have duplicates of most wood tools.
*HackRVA will cover the cost of materials and experienced people at can help decide a price on the class.
*A more experience member will help you setup the even on meetup.com. It's not hard, but doesn't hurt.
*Be clear and bounded on what you're going to do in your description on meetup as well as the workshop itself.
*Drop some good links in your meetup.com event for people to get a little pre-workshop knowledge.
*We don't pay people for doing workshops - its a part of being an outstanding member of our community. Free is best for our goals.
 
These are all just guidelines - some we pretty much always follow, but we're open to experimentation. If you have a unique idea, let someone at HackRVA know, and we can probably workout something.

Revision as of 15:46, 15 February 2016

Guidelines For a Good Workshop at HackRVA


  • Workshops should be a hands-on event (lecture-only style doesn't work well - if you want to give a talk, cool - that's different though.
  • Workshops should have something started (preferably completed) by the end.
  • Workshops seem to do best around 2-3 hours.
  • Workshops tend to be on Saturday or Sunday from/between 10am-1pm (they can start earlier or alter, but can't go beyond 1pm on weekends - those are freehack times). Weeknights can also work.
  • Limit the number of attendees to a reasonable amount. About 10 seems to be an upper limit for most things.
  • Consider tool limitations as well - wood working tends to only be 5 people because we don't have duplicates of most wood tools.
  • HackRVA will cover the cost of materials and experienced people at can help decide a price on the class.
  • A more experience member will help you setup the even on meetup.com. It's not hard, but doesn't hurt.
  • Be clear and bounded on what you're going to do in your description on meetup as well as the workshop itself.
  • Drop some good links in your meetup.com event for people to get a little pre-workshop knowledge.
  • We don't pay people for doing workshops - its a part of being an outstanding member of our community. Free is best for our goals.

These are all just guidelines - some we pretty much always follow, but we're open to experimentation. If you have a unique idea, let someone at HackRVA know, and we can probably workout something.