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The ASF has successfully been accepted as a participating FOSS community in the Outreachy Program [1] to work with Outreachy organizers to offer remote internships to applicants around the world.  With this program, we are looking forward to improving inclusion in our communities by understanding what are the barriers that underrepresented groups in the tech industry have while trying to start their journey.

Outreachy's goal is to support people from groups underrepresented in the technology industry. Outreachy interns will work remotely with mentors on projects ranging from programming, user experience, documentation, illustration and graphic design, to data science. Outreachy interns will receive stipends for developing said projects full-time for three months. 

Mentors will provide mentoring and project ideas and in return have the opportunity to get new participants - most importantly - to identify and bring in new committers from underrepresented groups.

If you are an ASF committer and you want to participate with your project, we ask you to do the following things by no later than 2019-Sep-17 23:00 UTC (project list submission are due a week later):

  1. Ensure you can host an Outreachy intern
  2. Understand the commitment to be a mentor. Please read [1] [4].
  3. Ensure we can capture a contribution friction log from your interns. We will come back to you with more information about this requirement. This requirement could be that you fill up a specific report for the friction log. Please take this into account along with the Outreachy responsibilities.
  4. Get consensus from your project’s PMC about the previous points and move to the next step. 
  5. Register your project in the Outreachy website. You will find the form (required internship project details and optional internship project details) in the following website [2]. The form is pretty detailed; just follow the instructions. Also, you'll find some tips on what makes a good project in [3]. We can review your project proposal  before you submit it. In that case, please, send us your proposal including the information required in [2]. Please be as specific as possible when describing your idea. Include the programming language, the tools and skills required, but try not to scare potential students away. They are supposed to learn what's required before the program starts. Use labels, e.g. for the programming language (java, c, c++, erlang, python, brainfuck, ...) or technology area (cloud, xml, web, foo, bar, ...). You can see an example project submission at [6].
  6. Curate a list of tasks for your Outreachy project [5]. Add an “outreachy19dec” label to issues related to your project. You should include links to search filters listing these issues in your project application. It’s also useful to use a “newbie-friendly” label to distinguish the starter tasks from the larger or more complex project tasks. This will provide tasks for applicants to complete during the application process. If your project doesn't use JIRA (e.g.httpd, ooo), you can use the Diversity & Inclusion board to coordinate with your applicants, just use the “Outreachy” component. Use of the Jira labels should be portable to other bug trackers.

[1]https://www.outreachy.org/mentor/#mentor

[2]https://www.outreachy.org/december-2019-to-march-2020-internship-round/communities/apache/submit-project/

[3]https://www.outreachy.org/mentor/mentor-faq/#define-a-project

[4]The Outreachy mentor contract, which you as an individual will be required to sign.

[5]https://issues.apache.org/jira/projects/DI

[6] https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/EDI/Example+Project




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