After the #masakism workshop

The Raku Programming Language Collect, Conserve and Remaster Project

After the #masakism workshop

Originally published on 5 May 2013 by Carl Mäsak.

On May 1st I learned what happens if you tell a bunch of people on the Internet, not all of whom you’ve met before, that you’re going to teach Perl (5 and 6) for free on an IRC channel for four hours.

It worked well. Actually, it worked well beyond my expectations.

Successes

I had written a bunch of material; short-ish texts mixed with exercises. I didn’t hear any feedback about the texts, but people threw themselves on the exercises. Which was lucky, because I basically didn’t have time to interact much with people. Everyone did their own thing.

The week before the workshop, I was taking a walk, and it occurred to me that the topics for the workshop should be laid out on a subway map. That turned out to work unexpectedly well. People followed the structure, I think. The material was pretty clear that they were free to skip/jump around if they wanted, so some did that.

People suggested fixes and improvements to the material during the workshop. I handled the easy ones, and delegated what could be delegated. If anything about the workshop felt 2013-futuristic, it was the fact that participants were hacking on the workshop in real time, as it was being played out. Github was totally right for this.

We agreed that a test was missing to force people to do the right thing, so he went ahead and added it.

Things learned

This was never a workshop for total beginners. Still, we got a number of those. I’m not sure how many. If there’s a next time, I’ll want to add a track for the people who haven’t done Perli or Raku before.

Based on the tasks that people actually solved, I got a lot of feedback on what worked and what didn’t. Which exercises served the overall message of the course, and which ones didn’t.

After the workshop, I know much better what I wanted the whole thing to be about. I think I can go back and make that even more clear. I’m still surprised at how well it worked already the first time around… but some bits in there can certainly be improved.

Message

So… what was the real message of the workshop? What is “masakism”?

Two things:

Once more?

So, should we do another #masakism workshop?

Yes, maybe we should. People seemed to like this first one. I’m open to finding a datetime for another one.

If you have any suggestions, get in touch.