The what now?

With the repeated success of the Google Summer of Code, Google has announced the Google Highly Open Participation Contest (GHOP) for pre-university students involved in all aspects of open source development. Drupal has been chosen as one of the ten projects participating in the new pilot program, which means we need you!

So if you're aged 13-18, or know someone who is, come join in the fun of improving Drupal! Sign up for a drupal.org account, and join the Drupal GHOP Group. We are looking for all varieties of contribution, from development to bug fixing to writing documentation to doing user-experience research.

How does it work?

If you are age 13-18 (or know someone who is :)) and meet the eligibility requirements, head over to Drupal's GHOP Project Page and check out the list of available tasks. If you find any marked "Open" that appeal to you, respond to the task with the text, "I claim this Task."

Provided you were the first one to claim it, the task will then be marked "Claimed" and you'll have a period of 2-5 days to work on it. If your work meets the criteria, you'll receive credit and then can claim another task if you'd like!

Each project has a "mentor" associated with it, who will be your main contact for any questions you may have. Don't limit yourself to just one person, though. Everyone involved in Drupal GHOP can answer questions or offer advise where needed, so please speak up and engage the community!

The Official Contest Rules and FAQs from Google have a more detailed (and official!) discussion of how it works.

What's in it for me?

In addition to the real-world experience participating in an open source community (which will also look totally awesome on your college application), if you complete one task, you get a nifty t-shirt. If you complete 3 tasks, you receive a $100 USD prize. And you keep receiving $100 USD prizes for every 3 tasks that you complete, up to $500.

Finally, whoever is deemed the best overall entrant from each participating project will receive the "Grand Prize," which is a trip to Google's Headquarters in Mountainview, CA for them and their parent/guardian. Should be a blast! :)

What if I don't meet the eligibility requirements?

You can still help by proposing a new task. Check our page on how to write a good task for some guidelines. If approved, we'll go ahead and mark this task as "Open" so that students can claim it. We can have up to 102 tasks, so feel free to get creative. Are there itches you want scratched that would make a useful learning opportunity for a student, and could be accomplished in about a week? Propose 'em as tasks! Remember, these don't have to be limited to coding, but can also be around things like QA, usability, documentation, and so on.

How else can I help?

We need an army of cheerful, helpful folks to be present in #drupal-ghop on irc.freenode.net, and subscribed to the GHOP group at http://groups.drupal.org/ghop-2007 to answer student questions. Students will likely need help on everything from how to install Drupal to how the community process works to API-level questions, so *everyone* who has any free time, please sign up and help these students succeed. :)

Comments

JohnForsythe’s picture

This is a great program, but the name is a little misleading. Only allowing people 13-18 isn't what I'd consider "highly open participation".

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John Forsythe
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sepeck’s picture

crying out loud. Maybe we should have boycotted the program?

-Steven Peck
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Test site, always start with a test site.
Drupal Best Practices Guide -|- Black Mountain

-Steven Peck
---------
Test site, always start with a test site.
Drupal Best Practices Guide

JohnForsythe’s picture

Let's not start a flame war.

--
John Forsythe

Amazon’s picture

The title for the project is a mouthful of marbles. But I suspect that the students identified with Highly as part of High School, rather than Highly Open, meaning anyone can join.

I believe 13-18 is normally High school age, but that might be a North American bias. This kind of confusion is something the user experience folks at Google normally catch, and fix. Perhaps Google was too clever, in this naming.

Cheers,
Kieran

CTO CivicSpace
Try hosted and pre-configured Drupal 5 profile
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Kieran Lal

dries’s picture

Also blogged about it here: http://buytaert.net/drupal-and-google-highly-open-participation-contest.

Good job webchick, Crell et al! :)

Gemma Morton’s picture

Very Interesting. Its a pity though, only 13-18yrs of age. Taking on a project such as this would look really good on my resume, not to mention pleasing to my employer. Anyway... Sigh, now I feel old...

Just wanted to mention that I believe the URLs supplied above are wrong. The following lead me to the correct pages:
Contest Rules: http://code.google.com/opensource/ghop/2007-8/rules.html
FAQs: http://code.google.com/opensource/ghop/2007-8/faqs.html

michelle’s picture

Yeah, the age range sucks both ways. We have an awesome contributer here who's only 12 so can't participate.

Michelle

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See my Drupal articles and tutorials or come check out life in the Coulee Region.

add1sun’s picture

Thanks for pointing that out - fixed now.

EDIT: Oh and I wanted to point out that the lower end of the range is unfortunately due to international law and being legally old enough to agree to the contest rules. We needled Google about it but their legal department was understandably pretty firm about not getting into underage issues.

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scor’s picture

the eligibility requirements links is also broken

add1sun’s picture

Thanks. Silly google, switching stuff around on us. :)

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michelle’s picture

... but it still sucks :P

Michelle

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See my Drupal articles and tutorials or come check out life in the Coulee Region.

ron williams’s picture

I'm not a lawyer, but I'm positive that the 13 age limit is due to the COPPA act not the minimum age to enter into a contract (that's 18, or any time with parental consent).

Ron Williams
http://ronwilliams.io/

Bevan’s picture

I think the age limit is great. I think this is just what open source needs to secure it's place society at a grass-roots level. I didn't know what open source was till I was about twenty. I didn't start programming till I was about 22. I always thought the programming was too geeky for me when I was at high school, but now wish I'd taken the one or two programming classes offered back then.

http://drupal.geek.nz/

catch’s picture

When I was at school, it was all Acorns and BBCs, and this was the mid '90s!

Bevan’s picture

I won our school it's first computer (an Acorn) just by collecting receipts at the local supermarket! :)

http://drupal.geek.nz/

Mgccl’s picture

Btw, it's not age 13 to 18, but actually, age > 13 and currently enroll in pre-college education.
I joined :) googleplex here I come

figaro’s picture

The 13 years limit is there because according to american law, no one under the age of 13 should be requested to do any work. The 18 years limit is probably there, because it is considered adulthood from that point forward, ie one should not organise a platform in order to solicit adults to do unpaid work. Adults are supposed to have bank accounts into which salaries are deposited.

Good luck to all involved!

michelle’s picture

The lower limit has to do with being able to enter into contract as said elsewhere. The upper limit, though, is because the point of the contest is to be for kids, not adults. The work isn't, in fact, unpaid but, even if it was, there is no law against setting up a program to get adults to volunteer to do open source work. :)

Michelle

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See my Drupal articles and tutorials or come check out life in the Coulee Region.

Mgccl’s picture

I'm 18, it got me worried for a sec...glad I'm still in high school
Google said...

The contest is open to all students who are thirteen (13) years of age or older on November 27, 2007. Students must be enrolled in a pre-university, e.g. high school or secondary school, educational institution.

in the FAQ
So if I'm 90 years old and I'm in high school, I should be allowed to join :)

Mgccl's blog

Seven_Six_Two’s picture

I agree that kids should not have to work, but I disagree with the second part. Don't most charitable organizations, open source projects and community service groups happily ask for volunteers? I doubt the upper age limit has any correlation to an american disinclination towards charity.