Difference between revisions of "GSOCMentorGuide"

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(ns-3 mentor guidelines)
(ns-3 mentor guidelines)
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'''4) Can people form mentor teams?'''
 
'''4) Can people form mentor teams?'''
  
Yes, two people can share mentor duties; one must be named the primary mentor, however, and the mentor proceeds must be shared.
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See (2).
  
 
'''5) How do payments work?'''
 
'''5) How do payments work?'''

Revision as of 15:31, 13 April 2013

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GSOC Ideas page

ns-3 mentor guidelines

Below are some specific guidelines and FAQs to applying to be a mentor in ns-3's GSoC program. These guidelines apply above and beyond what you will read on the GSOC site and on other wikis [1,2]. If you want to propose ideas and become a mentor, please read the below and the references cited.

1) How do mentors apply?

Mentors apply by submitting project ideas on the ideas page, or by contacting the org admin (Lalith) directly.

2) How are mentors chosen?

Mentor selection in ns-3 is somewhat secondary to student selection. We will select the strongest student applications that have reasonable, credible mentoring plans. If a student project proposal is exceptionally strong, but has been developed with no mentor or suggested project proposal, the selection committee or organizational admin will try to find a mentor during the application selection phase. However, all things being equal in the student applications, we will select the student project that has a solid mentoring commitment over one that doesn't have any mentor identified.

The rules for mentor selection are as follows:

  • Projects will have one lead mentor but may have backups or assistants.
  • At least one mentor on the mentoring team must be a maintainer of some sort (commit privileges on the code server, or equivalent). This policy will allow us to also shepherd new mentors into the ns-3 project.
  • Mentors will be selected based on the student projects selected.
  • Mentors may work for companies so long as they are able to devote the necessary time (several hours per week, up to ten hours per week in some cases) to the project.

3) How much time does it take?

We are asking mentors to commit to a minimum of 2-4 hours per week helping their student, and it may be more time in spots (such as around midterm and final evaluations). The amount of time required to make the project successful depends on the student and the degree of difficulty of the project. Almost daily interaction is needed on some projects.

As a guideline, we would encourage at least two meetings per week, where the meetings occur on Skype, IRC, or other interactive media.

4) Can people form mentor teams?

See (2).

5) How do payments work?

Each mentor is eligible for $500. In the past, the payment system worked as follows. Google required one individual to register as a vendor and accept payment for all mentors, and mentors were paid from this after U.S. taxes were withdrawn on the amount.

Mentors are encouraged to donate their mentor proceeds to the ns-3 Consortium. Mentors who prefer to receive their payments should arrange this with the organization admins.

6) What if a mentor has some summer vacation planned?

Mentors must arrange for backup mentoring during the period that they are unavailable.

7) Can prospective mentors help students develop applications?

Yes, but mentors should take reasonable steps to ensure that students do not develop an unfair competitive advantage from private conversations with mentors. During the application phase, it is best to hold project development discussions on the ns-developers list so that any prospective applicant can benefit from the discussion.

8) Do prospective mentors have any role in selecting the student projects?

A selection committee will be formed by the organizational admin (Lalith) and this committee may be composed of some prospective mentors. Please contact Lalith if you would like to serve on this committee.


[1] http://www.google-melange.com/document/show/gsoc_program/google/gsoc2012/faqs

[2] http://en.flossmanuals.net/GSoCMentoring/what-makes-a-good-mentor/