RE: Call for comments from IG: STEM survey first draft

I am such an American! 

I think more universal terms for K12 are primary school and high school.

University (or college) students are also called undergraduate students, those studying for Bachelor's degree (yes, that's how it's spelled in America). In the US, more often a BA than a BsC.

Graduate Student is a catch-all term for everything after that,  Masters, PhD, MD, PsyD, etc. 
 
These categories are just suggestions.

Tzviya

****************************
Tzviya Siegman * Digital Book Standards & Capabilities Lead * John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
111 River Street, MS 5-02 * Hoboken, NJ 07030-5774 * 201-748-6884 * tsiegman@wiley.com


-----Original Message-----
From: Ivan Herman [mailto:ivan@w3.org] 
Sent: Wednesday, January 07, 2015 9:47 AM
To: Siegman, Tzviya - Hoboken
Cc: Peter Krautzberger; W3C Digital Publishing IG
Subject: Re: Call for comments from IG: STEM survey first draft


> On 07 Jan 2015, at 15:35 , Siegman, Tzviya - Hoboken <tsiegman@wiley.com> wrote:
> 
> Hi Peter,
> 
> Excellent work.
> 
> I recommend linking to the Web Annotations WG instead of the DPUB TF
> 
> Because some of these questions will be irrelevant to some respondents, I recommend making all questions optional.
> 
> Question 4: target audience. Is there a way we can make this multiple choice? Perhaps:
> K12 students

Except that... "K12" is an Americanism. I had no idea wha that means until I began to talk to you guys...


> University Students 
> Graduate Students 

That again may be unclear outside the US. Actually... I am not even 100% sure what it means. I am not a university person but I remember my son was talking about "Master student", "PhD student", or "BsC Student". What corresponds to what?


Ivan

> Researchers
> Professionals
> Other
> 
> Question 7: I think the wording might be a little confusing because we are asking both whether existing tech is sufficient and insufficient at once. Perhaps, break it into 2 parts. (What) do you use to associate additional with your content (multiple choice). Then free-form, do you find this sufficient, please explain.
> 
> Question 9: I am not sure that this question will be clear enough. Perhaps, we need to clarify what we mean by re-usable. Re-usable to whom? I think this is targeting the publishers in the audience and the question is whether the publishers are re-using content chunks.
> 
> Question 15: Massive collaboration is listed twice
> 
> Question 17: Do you want respondents to specify which tools are in use? Perhaps clarify what you’d like to see in comments.
> 
> Question 29: I am not sure what you mean by non-web. Is this offline? Print?
> 
> Thanks,
> Tzviya
> ****************************
> Tzviya Siegman * Digital Book Standards & Capabilities Lead * John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
> 111 River Street, MS 5-02 * Hoboken, NJ 07030-5774 * 201-748-6884 * tsiegman@wiley.com
> 
> From: Peter Krautzberger [mailto:peter.krautzberger@mathjax.org]
> Sent: Monday, January 05, 2015 12:55 PM
> To: W3C Digital Publishing IG
> Subject: Call for comments from IG: STEM survey first draft
> 
> Hi everyone,
> 
> I've finished the first draft of the STEM TF Survey.
> 
> You can find it at  https://www.w3.org/2002/09/wbs/64149/DPUB-STEM-2014-12/.

> 
> Please take a look and post comments here.
> 
> Best,
> Peter.


----
Ivan Herman, W3C
Digital Publishing Activity Lead
Home: http://www.w3.org/People/Ivan/

mobile: +31-641044153
ORCID ID: http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0782-2704

Received on Wednesday, 7 January 2015 15:01:09 UTC