Kudos to @paulscott56 for the cool name. It all started on twitter.
School websites suck, actually, schools suck at being online. But in reality, schools don't need much to be online. 99/100 times the minimum viable school site might just be single static page with contact information, links to FB and/or Twitter. Oh, and a "add my to the mailing list" feature, cause that would be better...
The sad thing is that currently we have three camps, maybe more:
- Schools getting exploited by unsavoury IT companies and paying big bucks for mediocre FOSS deployments with Corel Draw graphics.
- Schools teachers acting defensively against anyone who is better than them at operating Dreamweaver
- Schools that are invisible to parents who are online.
We also have to work on the assumption that schools cant/wont pay for anything we do... This is why it should be a guide, and maybe a separate service can be spun off from this work.
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- Guide that explains to schools (that care) what the minimum viable online school presence is, and it is less than we think
- Guide that explains how email marketing systems can be used to communicate with parents, which ones are good and offering good deals for schools
- Guide on how to make a Facebook page to share other stuff, like sporting events and photos
- Guide to service providers that help schools out with free hosting and/or email
We think we know, but the reality is we don't... I propose we make three surveys, targeting Teachers, Scholars & Parents. Asking them what they expect from a schools online presence.
We can drive this through Google Docs, and get in touch with schools in our areas and through family broaden the reach of the survey. I think we'll be pleasently surprised.
I recommend we build using a static site generator, I'm biased towards middleman, but any static site generator will do.
The reason for a static site is that we can easily accept pull requests on Github from other capable citizens that want to help. Another side benefit is that if we offer guides on how to use MadMimi or another service, we can get them to maintain those guides via pull requests.
The above holds for folks who want to submit more detailed guides on how to run a WordPress site, or something similar. Likewise, service providers can fork and add themselves to the pages.
Heck, even schools following the guides can add themselves, that way the kids can get into making FOSS contributions.
No idea, but I think choosing a good static generator and crafting the survey would be the next best steps.
Middleman is a Rb thing isn't it? We only will have PHP hosting, so that may not be an option.
I will also put together an Android app outline that can be forked/used to communicate to parents etc.
Possibly have a look at forking twitter bootstrap or a simple free WP theme as a base template too.
Enable RSS for newsletter etc, as well as mailing list.