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Learn WordPress Version Taxonomy

In Learn WordPress, there is a taxonomyTaxonomy A taxonomy is a way to group things together. In WordPress, some common taxonomies are category, link, tag, or post format. https://codex.wordpress.org/Taxonomies#Default_Taxonomies. based upon WordPress versions used internally for auditing content.

Originally, this was used as a means of comparing or auditing content to ensure it includes any information about the latest versions. It is a checkpoint to indicate we have recently reviewed this content.

We now have several goals with this taxonomy:

  1. This content has been confirmed with the corresponding release version. At this time, this is an internal use-case, but we could envision using this publicly in a changelog at the bottom of lesson plans, workshops, courses to view content from previous versions.
  2. This content is contains new or important features about the latest release. This is public-facing and can help curate a page of relevant content per release on Learn.

The taxonomy created is now publicly accessible: https://github.com/WordPress/learn/pull/292. However, this may be quite cluttered with content comparison checks and not exclusive to features related to the current release.

Learn WordPress lesson plan landing page highlighting the WordPress version filter located in the sidebar
Learn WordPress lesson plan landing page

Thoughts to consider:

  • Should these live in 1 taxonomy area or should these live in 2 separate taxonomies?
  • How do we envision using that in the admin area?
  • How do we need data to publicly display now, and in the future?
  • What additional considerations should we have?

We’ll leave this post open until January 14 before progressing to GitHubGitHub GitHub is a website that offers online implementation of git repositories that can can easily be shared, copied and modified by other developers. Public repositories are free to host, private repositories require a paid subscription. GitHub introduced the concept of the ‘pull request’ where code changes done in branches by contributors can be reviewed and discussed before being merged be the repository owner. https://github.com/ Issues.

Social Learning Spaces Streaming Platforms

Social Learning Spaces are seeing considerable traction with attendees. You can find the calendar of events at https://learn.wordpress.org/social-learning/. This also appears by default in the WordPress Events and News widgetWidget A WordPress Widget is a small block that performs a specific function. You can add these widgets in sidebars also known as widget-ready areas on your web page. WordPress widgets were originally created to provide a simple and easy-to-use way of giving design and structure control of the WordPress theme to the user. inside ever WP Admin Dashboard.

Questions arose around expanding the use of the platform. Training was asked to consider including these events onto the calendar:

  1. Gutenberg Developer Hour Series
  2. Creating a Block-based theme from scratch

We approved GutenbergGutenberg The Gutenberg project is the new Editor Interface for WordPress. The editor improves the process and experience of creating new content, making writing rich content much simpler. It uses ‘blocks’ to add richness rather than shortcodes, custom HTML etc. https://wordpress.org/gutenberg/ Developer Hour Series, as Birgit is already vetted by community deputies and this is an initiative begun in CoreCore Core is the set of software required to run WordPress. The Core Development Team builds WordPress.. It would be hosted using the existing methods with MeetupMeetup All local/regional gatherings that are officially a part of the WordPress world but are not WordCamps are organized through https://www.meetup.com/. A meetup is typically a chance for local WordPress users to get together and share new ideas and seek help from one another. Searching for ‘WordPress’ on meetup.com will help you find options in your area. + Zoom.

For content that may be broadcast in a new manner, such as using a Twitch stream, we’d like additional guidelines to be included in the team handbook.

Questions to be considered:

  1. How much branding is appropriate? Custom Zoom branding, backgrounds, etc.
  2. Is it permitted during the broadcast to mention “follow/subscribe to this channel on Twitch/Facebook/Twitter whatever to know when I go live again”?
  3. What if users need to enter an email to view the broadcast?
  4. What if the additional streaming platform requires an RSVP as well?
  5. Share additional questions in the comments below

This post will remain open until January 14. From there, a summary will be presented to the team and additional guidelines added to the team handbook.

Recap of the Training Team meeting, January 4, 2022

Agenda

Ways to get involved

Slack Log (Requires SlackSlack Slack is a Collaborative Group Chat Platform https://slack.com/. The WordPress community has its own Slack Channel at https://make.wordpress.org/chat/. login to view. Set one up if you don’t have a Slack account.)

Live meeting attendees: @courane01 @azhiyadev @rkohilakis @webcommsat @elblakeo31 @nalininonstopnewsuk @ndiego @arasae @boogah
Async: @tantienhime @webtechpooja @meher

Meeting Notetakers

Volunteers needed:

  • team members interested in managing account access to Learn/Training team sites, answering any questions for new people eg helping new team members draft meeting recaps, pointing them to specific content in the handbook, and more
  • notetakers
  • to take part in the January 2022 focusing on the WordPress 5.9 release

Goal setting for the Training Team for 2022

Team Goal Setting document.

In December 2021, started part 2 of Team goal setting. To recap, in part 1, defined the Training Team’s

  • vision
  • values
  • stakeholders
  • ideas that will help us reach the vision and what will help us operate as a team

In part 2, the team: 

  • grouped the ideas into in-scope and out of scope. Out of scope was anything that was not within our remit (that is it relied on external parties to deliver), required additional development resources, or had too many dependencies that need to be in place before we could even consider working on it
  • broke this down into order of priority and grouped this into themes 
  • worked and can continue to collaborate async and update following frames on the Miro board.
    • Methods – what are the actions and steps that we need to take to get the job done? Please rank this in order of priority.
    • Obstacles – what obstacles do we face in accomplishing all this and how can we overcome them?
    • Metrics – how can we measure what we’ve done to identify if it is successful or not?
    • Link to the Miro board. This has been switched to view mode and if you would like edit access, please contact the team reps. On the board, P1 and P2P2 P2 or O2 is the term people use to refer to the Make WordPress blog. It can be found at https://make.wordpress.org/. represent Priority 1 and Priority 2.

APAC friendly meeting

With @webtechpooja joining the team reps for 2022, there have been discussions on running an APAC-friendly meeting. 

Actions/ requests:

  • Share this with those that may want to contribute.
  • Please complete the Doodle poll to help us identify the best time to run this meeting. Results of the poll will be announced at the next team meeting

LearnWP calendar

https://learn.wordpress.org/social-learning/

Training has received enquiries about potentially using the Social Learning Spaces (SLS) calendar in a few new ways. This calendar is part of the Upcoming Events widgetWidget A WordPress Widget is a small block that performs a specific function. You can add these widgets in sidebars also known as widget-ready areas on your web page. WordPress widgets were originally created to provide a simple and easy-to-use way of giving design and structure control of the WordPress theme to the user. in all WP Admin Dashboard views.

Useful reading material and how to apply to be involved with the Social Learning Spaces (formerly known as Discussion Groups for Learn WordPress):

There is no post on this, but please refer to this Learn WP GitHub issue to integrate it into the meetings calendar pluginPlugin A plugin is a piece of software containing a group of functions that can be added to a WordPress website. They can extend functionality or add new features to your WordPress websites. WordPress plugins are written in the PHP programming language and integrate seamlessly with WordPress. These can be free in the WordPress.org Plugin Directory https://wordpress.org/plugins/ or can be cost-based plugin from a third-party

Examples of SLS applications:

  • Proposal for a Gutenberg Developer Hour Series of events (@bph)
  • Creating a Block-based theme from scratch@daisyo and @welcher are conducting multiple sessions through a Twitch series on building from scratch a blockBlock Block is the abstract term used to describe units of markup that, composed together, form the content or layout of a webpage using the WordPress editor. The idea combines concepts of what in the past may have achieved with shortcodes, custom HTML, and embed discovery into a single consistent API and user experience. theme.

Discussion on the potential widening and use of Social Learning Spaces calendar

The below is a summary of the discussion in the meeting. Please add further suggestions and thoughts in the comments at the end of this post.

  • @arasae: I would love to see this calendar filled up with a variety of events from contributors from everywhere. It sounds like the questions that need to be answered are: “What can go on the calendar, and how do I get on that calendar?”
  • @courane01
    • we also have brand guidelines
    • this makes sense, especially the GutenbergGutenberg The Gutenberg project is the new Editor Interface for WordPress. The editor improves the process and experience of creating new content, making writing rich content much simpler. It uses ‘blocks’ to add richness rather than shortcodes, custom HTML etc. https://wordpress.org/gutenberg/ Dev Hours
    • what considerations do we have for others to also host various events both on SLS calendar AND livestream wherever else? Team is working on processes. There’s already vetting in process. To facilitate, one must apply. This will go through a group similar to Community Deputies for consideration.
    • as a team, what documentation do we want for guidelines and who will do the work of vetting all that? We are launching something similar to Community Deputies, and this likely would go there. But are we accounting for the increased workload if we really open this up to anyone wishing? 
  • @bph: As for the Developer Hours, it would all have wp.org branding only the zoom link and the promotion would run through Gutenberg Times. I was just trying to figure out if a meetup.com event would get more people interested in the events. Requested access as an organizer to the meetupMeetup All local/regional gatherings that are officially a part of the WordPress world but are not WordCamps are organized through https://www.meetup.com/. A meetup is typically a chance for local WordPress users to get together and share new ideas and seek help from one another. Searching for ‘WordPress’ on meetup.com will help you find options in your area. space to be able to update the calendar for this.
  • @courane01: Elevating it would be important and definitely wanted to see it there.
  • @nalininonstopnewsuk:
    • In terms of thinking about branding and marketing. Does the idea of opening up the events mean they would not necessarily be Learn WP events, but could be run, hosted, marketed by others in the ecosystem?
    • There are also marketing and data aspects to that question Courtney in terms of who can host and promotion. Would the normal review process occur in the same way as someone wanting to submit a workshop?
    • Another consideration, is whether the events would be recorded, how that recording would be used, and where it would appear in the future.
    • Consideration for how questions are encouraged to be raised during the event, and how they might be shared if it the recording appears on other platforms.
  • @courane01: I don’t have a lot of guidelines yet, but am in the phase of forming questions to consider. If we cross-promote, do we mention that “you can go to my profile to get more”? Do we care if folks need to sign up on multiple platforms
  • @nalininonstopnewsuk: The data issue is one we should consider. Consider guidelines on what mailing lists people may end up signing up to in order to be able to attend a session.
  • @courane01: If folks sign up on something to get access, it can put them onto email lists for promotions.
  • @arasae: so basically, someone who applies to run an event on Learn also does events outside of Learn. We need guidelines on if they can mention their other things while they run their Learn event? @courane01: yes. @arasae: can see how that could be an issue. The multiple platforms one is tricky, for sure! I would prefer one centralized place, but I’m not sure how to make that happen or if that’s even the best way about it.
  • @azhiyadev: I think the brand guidelines would come into play for workshops, SLS and lesson plans. I think for the Developer Hours, this can come onto Learn, there is a post on it for .org and @bph has already been vetted.
  • @arasae: So, guidelines for social learning calendar options would be on:
    • self-promotion outside of Learn WP
    • which things appear on the calendar and which are outside the scope of the calender (so basically, the answer to the question ‘what makes something an SLS?’)
    • others to be determined
    • with considerations on what people are signing up for (I know I get annoyed with the # of meetup emails I get) when they attend SLSs.
  • @boogah: I’m fine doing what I do for Learn (running SLSs) being explicitly for Learn and that’s it. However, I realize that, as someone whose time is sponsored by a corporate entity, my being fine with not getting them involved on any SLSs might be a minority opinion. So long as day job can say “Our very own Jason is running this SLS in n days” on Twitter and promote the event, I think that’s all they need out of the deal
  • @courane01: My own take, the content of what I’d consider also putting in would adhere very much to WP.org ethos and be impartial, but to view livestreams, it’d be signing up to my employer’s instance of Bevy, or even joining a Zoom that has our branding on that browser page that loads. I want to handle things delicately and consider all concerns. I could also just go with Zoom and SLS as is for topics that are appropriate. @boogah: Makes perfect sense.
  • @arasae: Product placement: is it okay if your employer/twitch ID/etc. exists in the background or not. Got it. Thank you for clarifying, Courtney!
  • @courane01: email sign ups or promoting our personal accounts though is a concern not addressed in brand guidelines.
  • @nalininonstopnewsuk:
    • also if corporate zoom accounts are being used, checks on whether they are being automatically recorded
  • @webcommsat:
    • the guidelines to use need to be simple to follow to not be a barrier if the aim is to encourage others to do partnership/ joint events in this space, and also to minimize inadvertent breaches from over complex information

January 2022 sprint – focus on WordPress 5.9 Release

Update from @azhiyadev

January 2022 sprint document – please read and add updates. This is an area to note the lesson plan and courses that need to be updated as well as the courses, lesson plans or workshops that need to be created too.

With the release of 5.9 scheduled for this month, all our efforts will be focused on updating Learn. Courtney and Hauwa have gone through all the content on Learn WP, updating the taxonomyTaxonomy A taxonomy is a way to group things together. In WordPress, some common taxonomies are category, link, tag, or post format. https://codex.wordpress.org/Taxonomies#Default_Taxonomies. (WP version and included content). With the release of 5.9, WordPress will now consist of four different types of themes:

  • Block theme: a theme made for FSE using HTMLHTML HTML is an acronym for Hyper Text Markup Language. It is a markup language that is used in the development of web pages and websites. templates and theme.jsonJSON JSON, or JavaScript Object Notation, is a minimal, readable format for structuring data. It is used primarily to transmit data between a server and web application, as an alternative to XML., allowing one to manage all parts of their site with blocks.
  • Universal theme: a theme that works with both the CustomizerCustomizer Tool built into WordPress core that hooks into most modern themes. You can use it to preview and modify many of your site’s appearance settings. and the Site Editor.
  • Hybrid theme: a classic theme that adopts a feature(s) of FSE, like theme.json or the template editor.
  • Classic theme: a theme built the way we’ve been used to with PHPPHP PHP (recursive acronym for PHP: Hypertext Preprocessor) is a widely-used open source general-purpose scripting language that is especially suited for web development and can be embedded into HTML. http://php.net/manual/en/intro-whatis.php. templates, functions.php, and more.

We will need to keep this in mind when creating content for Learn. We’ve broken the content down into revisionsRevisions The WordPress revisions system stores a record of each saved draft or published update. The revision system allows you to see what changes were made in each revision by dragging a slider (or using the Next/Previous buttons). The display indicates what has changed in each revision. and new content needed for 5.9. Each topic identifies the lesson plan that needs to be updated and if there is also a corresponding workshop that needs to be updated.
@courane01: There is a lot of content that needs to be updated (see 5.9 Revisions Needed)

As well as new content (see New Content Needed)

Volunteers needed:

  • Action: if you are interested in helping then please make a comment on the Sprint post saying what you can help with
  • @rkohilakis & @bph volunteered during the meeting. @nalininonstopnewsuk will confirm next as also involved with the release
  • @courane01: This will be the biggest push on updating content across Training team materials/Learn that the team has conducted in cadence with a WP release yet. Amongst the things we are also assessing is how to include Training contributors that revise and create content in a similar manner to how Docs does for release props
  • @ndiego : question: to tackle, for example, How to use WordPress Block Patterns”, how do I start that process?
    • @courane01: Team reps can get contributors access to Learn WP. Then they can share a link to the posts for review. The team has a great revisions updater plugin.
    • Would you like to claim the lesson plan and workshop videos of this topic? For video, I will check with the forming vetting team regarding how to handle this for updating. This is a first time around for this.
  • @nalininonstopnewsuk with @webcommsat reviewed two of the courses on FSE on Learn WP this last week, and identified some UXUX UX is an acronym for User Experience - the way the user uses the UI. Think ‘what they are doing’ and less about how they do it. issues for courses in general. @azhiyadev to add the update to the January sprint
  • The January sprint will focus on the release. If you need help creating content, there are some great workshop videos ready for you to learn how training does this:

@arasae summarized the process:

  1. Pick a topic. Is there anything else we should do?
  2. Get access if you don’t have it already to learn.wordpress.org
  3. Watch the video ‘how to use the revisions extended plugin
  4. Make the revisions on the website using the video as a guide.
  5. Get it reviewed (do we ask here in this chat?)
  6. Revisions made
  7. Changes published and

@courane01: comment either in team channel or on sprint post so we can keep track of who is doing what.

This summary has been appended as a comment on the January 2022 Sprint post.

Social media collaboration on WordPress 5.9

@webcommsat: We will be continuing this in the marketing slack Wed 5 and 12 January 2022, from 14:00 UTC. As usual, fellow training team members are very welcome. Another example of how the two teams are collaborating well together.

Open Floor

@nalininonstopnewsuk: for the new people to this team, there is a box at the top of the Training homepage which has some key links. For example, the sprints document. It is a good place to find the latest things. Most teams have a similar box. https://make.wordpress.org/training/

APAC-friendly meetings: @azhiyadev: The idea is to have two identical meetings, the second one might be a recap of the first. Contributors are not expected to attend both, but can if they would like to.

Props to @webcommsat for notetaking, @courane01 and @azhiyadev for leading the meeting.

#5-9, #marketing, #training-team

January 2022 Sprint

The Training team is using the Sprint method to determine what we are working on and to determine our timeframe for delivery.

What is a Sprint?

Sprints are fixed length events of one month or less to create consistency. A new Sprint starts immediately after the conclusion of the previous Sprint.

https://www.scrum.org/resources/what-is-a-sprint-in-scrum

Sprint Goals

Learn Content

We are currently using TrelloTrello Project management system using the concepts of boards and cards to organize tasks in a sane way. This is what the make.wordpress.com/marketing team uses for example: https://trello.com/b/8UGHVBu8/wp-marketing. to manage and keep track of the status of each piece of content on Learn (lesson plans, video workshops and courses). Every piece of content has its own Trello card. The Trello lists represent our Development Workflow, each list contains a card that explains how to use that list.

Types of themes:

  • BlockBlock Block is the abstract term used to describe units of markup that, composed together, form the content or layout of a webpage using the WordPress editor. The idea combines concepts of what in the past may have achieved with shortcodes, custom HTML, and embed discovery into a single consistent API and user experience. theme: a theme made for FSE using HTMLHTML HTML is an acronym for Hyper Text Markup Language. It is a markup language that is used in the development of web pages and websites. templates and theme.jsonJSON JSON, or JavaScript Object Notation, is a minimal, readable format for structuring data. It is used primarily to transmit data between a server and web application, as an alternative to XML., allowing one to manage all parts of their site with blocks.
  • Universal theme: a theme that works with both the CustomizerCustomizer Tool built into WordPress core that hooks into most modern themes. You can use it to preview and modify many of your site’s appearance settings. and the Site Editor.
  • Hybrid theme: a classic theme that adopts a feature(s) of FSE, like theme.json or the template editor.
  • Classic theme: a theme built the way we’ve been used to with PHPPHP PHP (recursive acronym for PHP: Hypertext Preprocessor) is a widely-used open source general-purpose scripting language that is especially suited for web development and can be embedded into HTML. http://php.net/manual/en/intro-whatis.php. templates, functions.php, and more.

See FSE Program: Answers from Round Three of Questions for information about the types of themes.

Please keep this in mind when creating and revising content for Learn WordPress.

If you are updating content now before 5.9 ships, please check out the pluginPlugin A plugin is a piece of software containing a group of functions that can be added to a WordPress website. They can extend functionality or add new features to your WordPress websites. WordPress plugins are written in the PHP programming language and integrate seamlessly with WordPress. These can be free in the WordPress.org Plugin Directory https://wordpress.org/plugins/ or can be cost-based plugin from a third-party #meta created for us, it’s like a pull request inside the WP editor

How we use the RevisionsRevisions The WordPress revisions system stores a record of each saved draft or published update. The revision system allows you to see what changes were made in each revision by dragging a slider (or using the Next/Previous buttons). The display indicates what has changed in each revision. Extended plugin on LearnWP

WordPress 5.9 Revisions Needed:

1. Pick a topic, any topic! Let us know in the comments or drop us a message in the #training Slack channel

2. Get access, if you don’t have it already, to learn.wordpress.orgWordPress.org The community site where WordPress code is created and shared by the users. This is where you can download the source code for WordPress core, plugins and themes as well as the central location for community conversations and organization. https://wordpress.org/. Ask in the #training SlackSlack Slack is a Collaborative Group Chat Platform https://slack.com/. The WordPress community has its own Slack Channel at https://make.wordpress.org/chat/. channel.

3. Watch the ‘How we use the Revisions Extended Plugin’ video above.

4. Make the revisions on the site using the video as a guide. Set the date to January 25, 2022.

5. Ask the team to review it. Drop us a message in the #training Slack channel.

6. A member of the team will review and publish the changes.

If you get stuck, just drop us a message in Slack.

TopicLesson PlanWorkshop
Anatomy of a Theme
https://learn.wordpress.org/lesson-plan/anatomy-of-a-theme/
Backing up your siteMove images off GitHubGitHub GitHub is a website that offers online implementation of git repositories that can can easily be shared, copied and modified by other developers. Public repositories are free to host, private repositories require a paid subscription. GitHub introduced the concept of the ‘pull request’ where code changes done in branches by contributors can be reviewed and discussed before being merged be the repository owner. https://github.com/ repo
https://learn.wordpress.org/lesson-plan/backing-up-your-wordpress-site
Build a Sitemap for a siteThis should be compared to sitemaps already in coreCore Core is the set of software required to run WordPress. The Core Development Team builds WordPress.
https://learn.wordpress.org/?p=366&post_type=lesson-plan&preview=true
@azhiyadev
Child themeChild theme A Child Theme is a customized theme based upon a Parent Theme. It’s considered best practice to create a child theme if you want to modify the CSS of your theme. https://developer.wordpress.org/themes/advanced-topics/child-themes/. for classic themesThis should mention classic themes
https://learn.wordpress.org/lesson-plan/child-themes

@azhiyadev
Choosing a ThemeShould clarify the 4 types of themes
https://learn.wordpress.org/lesson-plan/choosing-and-installing-themes/
Should clarify the 4 types of themes https://learn.wordpress.org/workshop/how-to-choose-install-a-theme/
Classic Editor Content Editor OverviewSome of the images are not coming across https://learn.wordpress.org/lesson-plan/content-editor-overview/
@azhiyadev
Rename to Classic Theme Menuhttps://learn.wordpress.org/lesson-plan/managing-menus/
@azhiyadev
Creating a block patternRename from Regsitering https://learn.wordpress.org/workshop/registering-block-patterns/
Customizer TaglineCapitalize the P, describe that customizer isn’t in FSE
https://learn.wordpress.org/lesson-plan/customizer-taglines

@azhiyadev
Describe how to modify taglines in FSE https://learn.wordpress.org/workshop/customizer-taglines
Glossary Creation WorkshopThis doesn’t follow the lesson plan formats
https://learn.wordpress.org/lesson-plan/glossary-creation-workshop/
How to use WordPress Block PatternsUpdate to include wordpress.org/patterns & https://github.com/WordPress/gutenberg/pull/35773 https://learn.wordpress.org/lesson-plan/how-to-use-wordpress-block-patterns/
Update to include wordpress.org/patterns & https://github.com/WordPress/gutenberg/pull/35773
https://learn.wordpress.org/workshop/using-block-patterns/
Intro to common pluginsreview what plugins are common/popular now, remove mentions of Codex
https://learn.wordpress.org/?p=317&post_type=lesson-plan&preview_id=317&preview=true
Intro to CSSCSS CSS is an acronym for cascading style sheets. This is what controls the design or look and feel of a site. Review how to do this in block themes
https://learn.wordpress.org/lesson-plan/introduction-to-css/?preview_id=318&preview_nonce=269bc7d157&preview=true
Include how to do this in block themes – are there areas of CSS that exceed FSE to include
https://learn.wordpress.org/workshop/custom-css-in-the-editor/?preview_id=1058&preview=true&_thumbnail_id=2774
Introduction to the CustomizerMention that this is for Classic and Hybrid themes
https://learn.wordpress.org/lesson-plan/introduction-to-the-customizer/
Mention that this is for Classic and Hybrid themes
https://learn.wordpress.org/workshop/using-the-theme-customizer/
Managing WidgetsWidgets without customizer in block based themes
https://learn.wordpress.org/lesson-plan/managing-widgets/
managing widgets in classic themes needed
Setting up a dev environmentNeeds to follow lesson plan and workshop formats
https://learn.wordpress.org/?p=8098&post_type=lesson-plan&preview=1&_ppp=f000c5d75d
Setting a static front pageStatic Front Page A WordPress website can have a dynamic blog-like front page, or a “static front page” which is used to show customized content. Typically this is the first page you see when you visit a site url, like wordpress.org for example. clarify how to do this in FSE https://learn.wordpress.org/lesson-plan/setting-a-static-page-as-your-homepage/
Style Guide Creation WorkshopThis doesn’t follow lesson plan formatting
https://learn.wordpress.org/lesson-plan/style-guide-creation-workshop/
Template HierarchyRevise for FSE inclusion
https://learn.wordpress.org/lesson-plan/template-hierarchy/
The LoopLoop The Loop is PHP code used by WordPress to display posts. Using The Loop, WordPress processes each post to be displayed on the current page, and formats it according to how it matches specified criteria within The Loop tags. Any HTML or PHP code in the Loop will be processed on each post. https://codex.wordpress.org/The_Loop.consider diagraming this in light of the query loop block
https://learn.wordpress.org/lesson-plan/the-loop/
Theme TroubleshootingThis will need to be updated to reflect when we have a new lesson plan created about using the styles.
https://learn.wordpress.org/lesson-plan/theme-troubleshooting/
Troubleshooting basicsupdate to include Site Health, plugin and native to core
https://learn.wordpress.org/lesson-plan/troubleshooting-basics/

https://learn.wordpress.org/workshop/wordpress-troubleshooting-basics-part-1/ AND https://learn.wordpress.org/workshop/wordpress-troubleshooting-basics-part-2-troubleshooting-with-logs/
W3 total cachebroken images, follow lesson plan format
https://learn.wordpress.org/?post_type=lesson-plan&p=348
Webfontskeep an eye on https://make.wordpress.org/core/2021/09/28/implementing-a-webfonts-api-in-wordpress-core/
https://learn.wordpress.org/lesson-plan/web-fonts/
What Are Google XML SitemapsI think we should go with Site Kit as that is maintained by Google, and revise the whole article
https://learn.wordpress.org/?post_type=lesson-plan&p=346
What Is A ThemeInclude types of themes, see above
https://learn.wordpress.org/lesson-plan/what-is-a-theme/
What is Contact Form 7adhere to lesson plan format AND import images from GitHub
https://learn.wordpress.org/?post_type=lesson-plan&p=367
What Is Wordfence Security
What Is Yoast SEOupdate this to follow lesson plan format
https://learn.wordpress.org/?post_type=lesson-plan&p=358
What to include in functions.phpReview for FSE
https://learn.wordpress.org/lesson-plan/what-to-include-in-functions-dot-php-file/
What you can do with WordPressRemove references to WordPress.comWordPress.com An online implementation of WordPress code that lets you immediately access a new WordPress environment to publish your content. WordPress.com is a private company owned by Automattic that hosts the largest multisite in the world. This is arguably the best place to start blogging if you have never touched WordPress before. https://wordpress.com/
https://learn.wordpress.org/lesson-plan/what-you-can-do-with-wordpress/
WidgetWidget A WordPress Widget is a small block that performs a specific function. You can add these widgets in sidebars also known as widget-ready areas on your web page. WordPress widgets were originally created to provide a simple and easy-to-use way of giving design and structure control of the WordPress theme to the user. AreasThis needs to be updated for also including block based themes
https://learn.wordpress.org/lesson-plan/widget-areas/
List of lesson plans and workshops that need to be revised for 5.9

WordPress 5.9 New Content Needed:

1. Pick a topic, any topic! Let us know in the comments or drop us a message in the #training Slack channel

2. Get access, if you don’t have it already, to learn.wordpress.org. Ask in the #training Slack channel.

If you need help creating content, we’ve got some great workshops videos ready for you to learn how to do this:

* Lesson plan about lesson plans and workshops about lesson plans

* Workshop about workshops

If you get stuck, just drop us a message in Slack.

TopicLesson PlanWorkshop
Block Navigation MenuNavigation Menu A theme feature introduced with Version 3.0. WordPress includes an easy to use mechanism for giving various control options to get users to click from one place to another on a site.
Block Theme Comment Block
Block Theme Template Hierarchy
Build a site using a block theme (Twenty Twenty Two)
Child theme for block themes@arasae
How to set site icons and logo (without Customizer)
Difference between reusable blocks, block pattern, templates, template parts
Duotone
Gallery Block
Managing widgets in block themes needed
Searching openverse
Searching and submitting to the photo directory
Setting a static front page in FSE@kemmy99
Styling your site with global styles
Submitting a block pattern to the directory
Submitting photos to the photo directory
Template parts
Template Tourrevise
https://learn.wordpress.org/lesson-plan/template-tour/
Theme.json
Using list view
Using theme.json with classic themes
Using widgets in block themes
Using WordPress in other languagesNeeds to reflect the language switcher update https://make.wordpress.org/core/2021/12/20/introducing-new-language-switcher-on-the-login-screen-in-wp-5-9/

https://learn.wordpress.org/workshop/using-wordpress-in-other-languages/
What is flex layout and how to configure with block themes
List of lesson plans and workshops that need to be created for 5.9

Courses Needed

General

  1. Contributor courses

5.9

  1. User Facing Full Site Editing (FSE) – Part 1 @rkohilakis
  2. User FSE – Part 2 @west7

Learn Functionality

These are our high priority items. If you are interested in helping out, please let us know in the #meta-learn Slack channel.

Visit GitHub for a complete list of open issues.

  1. Style a print-friendly style sheet (transcripts and lesson plans)
  2. Integrate speaker feedback tool
  3. Google Slides block for Lesson Plans The team is carrying out an audit of the Slides Plugin to ascertain the level of maintenance required and amount of work needed to fix the bug @binarygary @alexstine @danilong
  4. Updates to handle course, lesson & quiz flows
  5. Automatically recognize contributions on Profiles
  6. Fix quiz button styling to match other buttons
  7. Learner recognition on WordPress.org profile
  8. Use consistent templates and styles across post types
  9. Styling for the Details Summary block
  10. Modify workshop archive ordering

Training Team

Administrative tasks for the team, some of these are ongoing.

  1. Publish Learn roadmap
    1. Learn content roadmap Trello board
    2. Learn functionality Trello board
    3. Learn Team members Trello board
  2. Fix 404 errors on Learn
  3. HelpScout rotation
  4. Meeting notetakers rotation

Upcoming Meetings

You are welcome to join the team at any time! If you are new to the Training Team, please introduce yourself in the #training channel before the meeting (or anytime!) and feel free to join us in the meeting and participate as you are able.


Training Team Mission

The WordPress training team helps people learn to use, extend, and contribute to WordPress through synchronous and asynchronous learning as well as downloadable lesson plans for instructors to use in live environments, via learn.wordpress.org.

Getting Involved

Everyone is welcome and encouraged to join in, comment on posts, and participate in meetings and on projects. Here’s what you need to know to get started.

  1. Getting Involved:- https://make.wordpress.org/training/handbook/getting-started/
  2. About The Team:- https://make.wordpress.org/training/handbook/about/ 
  3. Our Team Blog:- https://make.wordpress.org/training/ 
  4. Our Content Roadmap:- https://trello.com/b/BsfzszRM/wordpress-training-team-lesson-plan-development 
  5. What We Are Currently Working On This Month:- https://make.wordpress.org/training/category/sprint/
  6. Learn WordPress Roadmap:- https://trello.com/b/rK1tztAA/learn-wordpress 
  7. Learn WordPress Issues Log:- https://github.com/WordPress/learn
  8. Our Lesson Plans:- https://learn.wordpress.org/lesson-plans/
  9. Our YouTube Channel:- https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCnxqNA0WORZXWurEP6cNV6w 
  10. Learn Website:- https://learn.wordpress.org/

#learn-wordpress, #training-team

Training Team Agenda for January 4, 2022

Please join us Team Meeting Tuesdays 17:00 UTC OR Office Hour Friday 11:00 UTC OR Coffee Hour Friday 14:00 UTC in the #training Slack channel for our weekly meetings!


This Week’s Agenda

  1. Intro/Welcome
  2. News
    1. Meeting Note Takers
    2. Team Goal Setting
    3. APAC friendly team meeting – Doodle poll
    4. Dev office hour calendar
      1. Gutenberg Developer Hour Series
      2. Creating a Block-based theme from scratch
  3. January 2022 Sprint
  4. Open Discussions

Upcoming Meetings

You are welcome to join the team at any time! If you are new to the Training Team, please introduce yourself in the #training channel before the meeting (or anytime!) and feel free to join us in the meeting and participate as you are able.


Training Team Mission

The WordPress training team helps people learn to use, extend, and contribute to WordPress through synchronous and asynchronous learning as well as downloadable lesson plans for instructors to use in live environments, via learn.wordpress.org.

Getting Involved

Everyone is welcome and encouraged to join in, comment on posts, and participate in meetings and on projects.

  1. Getting Involved:- https://make.wordpress.org/training/handbook/getting-started/
  2. About The Team:- https://make.wordpress.org/training/handbook/about/ 
  3. Our Team Blog:- https://make.wordpress.org/training/ 
  4. Our Content Roadmap:- https://trello.com/b/BsfzszRM/wordpress-training-team-lesson-plan-development 
  5. What We Are Currently Working On This Month:- https://make.wordpress.org/training/category/sprint/
  6. Learn WordPress Roadmap:- https://trello.com/b/rK1tztAA/learn-wordpress 
  7. Learn WordPress Issues Log:- https://github.com/WordPress/learn
  8. Our Lesson Plans:- https://learn.wordpress.org/lesson-plans/
  9. Our YouTube Channel:- https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCnxqNA0WORZXWurEP6cNV6w 
  10. Learn Website:- https://learn.wordpress.org/

#learn-wordpress, #training, #training-team

Training Team Meeting Agenda for December 21, 2021

Please join us Team Meeting Tuesdays 17:00 UTC OR Office Hour Friday 11:00 UTC OR Coffee Hour Friday 14:00 UTC in the #training Slack channel for our weekly meetings!


This Week’s Agenda

  1. Intro/Welcome
  2. News
    1. Meeting Note Takers rotation
    2. Team Goal Setting 2022
    3. APAC friendly meeting Doodle poll
  3. Review wanted
    1. FSE course part 1
    2. Simple Site design with full editing
  4. Zoom holiday hangout – bring your own cookies, chocolate, and cake.

Upcoming Meetings

You are welcome to join the team at any time! If you are new to the Training Team, please introduce yourself in the #training channel before the meeting (or anytime!) and feel free to join us in the meeting and participate as you are able.


Training Team Mission

The WordPress training team helps people learn to use, extend, and contribute to WordPress through synchronous and asynchronous learning as well as downloadable lesson plans for instructors to use in live environments, via learn.wordpress.org.

Getting Involved

Everyone is welcome and encouraged to join in, comment on posts, and participate in meetings and on projects.

  1. Getting Involved:- https://make.wordpress.org/training/handbook/getting-started/
  2. About The Team:- https://make.wordpress.org/training/handbook/about/ 
  3. Our Team Blog:- https://make.wordpress.org/training/ 
  4. Our Content Roadmap:- https://trello.com/b/BsfzszRM/wordpress-training-team-lesson-plan-development 
  5. What We Are Currently Working On This Month:- https://make.wordpress.org/training/category/sprint/
  6. Learn WordPress Roadmap:- https://trello.com/b/rK1tztAA/learn-wordpress 
  7. Learn WordPress Issues Log:- https://github.com/WordPress/learn
  8. Our Lesson Plans:- https://learn.wordpress.org/lesson-plans/
  9. Our YouTube Channel:- https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCnxqNA0WORZXWurEP6cNV6w 
  10. Learn Website:- https://learn.wordpress.org/

#goal-setting, #training-team

Recap for Training Team Meeting December 14, 2021

Slack Log (Requires SlackSlack Slack is a Collaborative Group Chat Platform https://slack.com/. The WordPress community has its own Slack Channel at https://make.wordpress.org/chat/. login to view. Set one up if you don’t have a Slack account.)

The agenda for the meeting can be found here

Introductions and Welcome

In attendance: @rkohilakis, @courane01, @azhiyadev, @peteringersoll, @boogah, @clshannon @Webcommsat, @kemmy99, @webtechpooja, and @rkohilakis.

Welcoming the newcomers joining the team (Slack usernames): @oktopuce (Florian Rival), @elblakeo31 (Blake B), @burtrw (Ronnie Burt), and @dmac90712 (Derek McCrary)

@azhiyadev:
We’ve had quite a few new people join the channel recently. What is your interest in Learn/Training and what do you enjoy outside of WordPress: 

Response:

@elblakeo31: Three key interests from me… I’m super interested in FSE-related training. My agency, Decubing,  is trying to integrate FSE components into client projects, and our developers will need some help getting up to speed with all the updates. Also, I’m working with a non-profit code school in New Orleans, Operation Spark. We’ve been talking about creating a WordPress track to promote entrepreneurship. Finally, I’m building an app for campus website management(Edupack). Lots of Higher Ed pros have told us a learning library would be super useful. We’re trying to figure out what we should focus on internally and how we might just contribute to the great work of the #training team. Here if anyone wants to chat!!

@courane01: Welcome @elblakeo31,  I’ve instructed WP development in a high school and front end Bootcamp. Happy to collaborate for schools.

@elblakeo31: Amazing @courane01! Operation Spark has a great high school track. We’re hoping to offer WP fundamentals so that graduates can start their own WP-based businesses. (I paid for my college by coding themes through Tulane!). We’re still formulating our plan of attack, but I’ll certainly get in touch with you when I have the next steps from the team. @rkohilakis has also been a great help!

One immediate thing that has been mentioned: some kind of certification for WordPress development completion. I know nothing like that exists, but lots of eager learners seem to want it.

@courane01: Nothing exists yet. Stay tuned for preliminary research in 2022 though. Also – we will be including achievements on .org profiles for completing courses on Learn.

@elblakeo31: Yay! I definitely will. That’s a big request! Happy to get involved in the convo.

@courane01: learn.wordpress.org

@elblakeo31: That’s great!

@azhiyadev: We want to better acknowledge the contributions made to the team.  If you have not yet filled out our contact form, please do.

@kemmy99 volunteered to take notes today, thank you. Meeting recap notes is one of the best ways to get started contributing to a team. Please refer to this guide to get started.

News

Welcome, and Help Scout Wranglers: Last week we agreed to set up a rotation for HelpScout. The following people have volunteered to manage @rkohilakis @arasae @alexstine @azhiyadev If you want to help, please let us know. @hlashbrooke is in the process of documenting the process of managing applications for social learning spaces group facilitators.

We are still looking for team members interested in managing account access to Learn/Training team sites, and answering any questions for new people. This could also include helping new team members draft meeting recaps, pointing them to specific content in the handbook, and more. 
Interested? Let us know!

Two people have indicated their interest to be team members for managing account access to Learn/Training team sites. Kemi Makinde and @west7.

Team Goal Setting 2022: We are using Miro for a virtual whiteboard with sticky notes for planning. (please keep that invite link out of recap notes to prevent spam). On Monday we kicked off part 2 of our Team goal setting. To recap, in part 1, we defined our 

  • Our vision
  • Our values
  • Our stakeholders
  • The ideas that will help us reach the vision and what will help us operate as a team

In part 2, we looked at those ideas and started to group them into what was in-scope and out of scope. Out of scope was anything that was not within our remit (that is it relied on external parties to deliver), required additional development resources, or had too many dependencies that need to be in place before we could even consider working on it. We then broke this down into order of priority and grouped this into themes. We ask that team members update the following frames on the Miro board:

  • Methods – what are the actions and steps that we need to take to get the job done? Please rank this in order of priority.
  • Obstacles – what obstacles do we face in accomplishing all this and how can we overcome them?
  • Metrics – how can we measure what we’ve done to identify if it is successful or not?

Question from @courane01: Do we want to run a final session at the same time next week to break this down into different milestones?

Response:

@webcommsat: I will try to join depending on the government’s announcements on COVID 

@west7: I will be able to join

@webcommsat: What date is this now set for please @azhiyadev? Thanks,

@azhiyadev: Hi @webcommsat. We agreed to run it asynchronously, @courane01 and I can still run another Zoom session this coming Monday at 19:00 UTC for those who are free and want to join.

@rkohilakis: should we do this after the new year?

@azhiyadev: It depends, do we think people will be able to concentrate on it between now and next week? We have our final team meeting next week, it would be good to try and at least do Methods, Obstacles, and Metrics offline so that all we need to do is discuss it on Monday/Tuesday meeting. However, I’m happy to push it to next year if that is better for everyone else. (edited) I wouldn’t want to push it past the second week of January.

@rkohilakis: I will be around the beginning of next week, but I believe some people might be taking time away from the keyboard for the Christmas holiday.

@courane01: I’ll be around until Dec 23. I totally understand folks heading away for holidays. I’m looking forward to it as well.

@peteringersoll: I’m OK either way – but I plan to “check out” (actually, work on my own projects) during the holiday break, probably starting on the 22nd.

@courane01: That’s totally understandable.  I’m wondering if we can get the bulk done async

@azhiyadev: Same, can we commit to working on this async until the end of this week and then recap in the 2nd week of January so all we are doing is working on Milestones for the year?

@courane01: The concern is in regrouping after the holidays to ensure we are ready to make the most use of the month. But also – holidays.

@azhiyadev: Looks like a few more people are okay with working async. So let us work towards that and then see where we are in the first/second week of January.

@kemmy99: That sounds good.

APAC friendly meeting: With Pooja joining us as team repTeam Rep A Team Rep is a person who represents the Make WordPress team to the rest of the project, make sure issues are raised and addressed as needed, and coordinates cross-team efforts. for 2022, we have been discussing running an APAC friendly meeting. Please complete the Doodle poll to help us identify the best time to run this meeting.

Response:

@courane01: @harishanker can you help elevate this? @meher @oneal @west7 @hlashbrooke @yogesh @chetan200891

@courane01: @nao also helps elevate

@harishanker: For sure, @courane01! Happy to share it in the local network as well. Thanks for the heads-up!  Pinging @yogesh as well.

@courane01: @OGlekler also – if you know folks interested?

@webtechpooja: @hardiksharma – If you are interested

@courane01: @ashiquzzaman @chaion07

@chaion07: Thanks, @courane01. I’ve added my votes to the poll 

@chetan200891: Thanks for informing. Added mine. 

Upcoming events

  1. State of the Word
  2. WordPress 2021 annual Survey
  3. Discussion groups/social learning spaces

Sprint

December Sprint: As agreed if you were working on anything in November, you can continue to work on this. We are holding off on creating new content until we can assess what we have for the 5.9 release.

5.9 Audit 
We especially need help reviewing lesson plans for versions of WordPress depicted and workshops for WP version + Included Content taxonomies.
https://make.wordpress.org/training/2021/09/24/preparing-learn-for-wordpress-updates/

@azhiyadev: If anyone is interested in helping with the audit, please let us know.

Response:

@webcommsat: I know @nalininonstopnewsuk had said she would try and help with this. She is in another meeting at the moment so will have to check in with you later.

@peteringersoll: Include me for the audit. I just have to check if I have the necessary Learn access.

@courane01: We should have a list together just after the holidays for what needs to be updated and created across Learn.

@peteringersoll: so I understand – is someone working on what needs to be updated and is this part of the audit?

@courane01: yes, tomorrow and over the next few days we’ll start to see some development notes ship addressing key features of WP being released or vastly changed. We need to identify all content to be created or revised.

@courane01: I’ve started a spreadsheet linked in the audit article

@peteringersoll: Got it. Just let me know how I can help.

@peteringersoll: In the meantime, I’ll review instructions on https://make.wordpress.org/training/2021/09/24/preparing-learn-for-wordpress-updates/

Check-in

  1. What did you commit to last week? As a reminder
  2. What did you do?
  3. Any blockers?
  4. What will you do next week?

Response:

@rkohilakis:
1/2. Been applying feedback and suggestions to FSE course part 1.  Captured almost all of the media for the course (screenshots, screencasts, workshops).  Adding it into a rough draft on Learn.
3. Time seems to always be a blocker and managing other projects for work.
4. Hopefully have all feedback integrated by the end of this week.  Going to send out another draft with media linked to a course preview so we can look at it in the course’s real home.

@courane01:

  1. Finish goal setting AND work 4 hrs on auditing Learn for WP updates. Also run through https://make.wordpress.org/test/2021/11/30/help-test-wordpress-5-9-features/ to help me spot any areas that we should update.
  2. Attended goal setting and worked async on it, completed a round of testing. Also did clock about 4hrs on revising the taxonomyTaxonomy A taxonomy is a way to group things together. In WordPress, some common taxonomies are category, link, tag, or post format. https://codex.wordpress.org/Taxonomies#Default_Taxonomies. in Learn which will improve identifying content to create / revise easier for 5.9.
  3. Blockers: nope
  4. Next week: finish async goal setting, start a draft of the content to update/create for 5.9, and help move the goals as we know them over to GitHubGitHub GitHub is a website that offers online implementation of git repositories that can can easily be shared, copied and modified by other developers. Public repositories are free to host, private repositories require a paid subscription. GitHub introduced the concept of the ‘pull request’ where code changes done in branches by contributors can be reviewed and discussed before being merged be the repository owner. https://github.com/ projects.

@azhiyadev:

  1. I will continue to audit our TrelloTrello Project management system using the concepts of boards and cards to organize tasks in a sane way. This is what the make.wordpress.com/marketing team uses for example: https://trello.com/b/8UGHVBu8/wp-marketing. boards and review
  2. Red brand content, team goal setting, I’m liaising with Hugh on the functionality Trello board
  3. Time
  4. The same including updating the Miro board frames and 5.9 audit

@webtechpooja:

  1. Volunteered for auditing lesson plan
  2. Explored 5.9 version and few lesson plans
  3. time and health both are blocker for me this week.
  4. Continuing with auditing lesson plan for 5.9

@west7:

  1. What did you commit to last week? Working on FSE Course: Part 2
  2. What did you do? I have been making progress with the course…
  3. Any blockers? Struggled with some aspects of Templates and wording things.  There is not a lot of FSE documentation available yet.
  4. What will you do next week? Continue working on the course and start creating media

@azhiyadev:
Thank you for all the updates, please continue to do so async if you were unable to make it to the meeting.

Open Discussions

Does anyone have anything else they want to discuss?

@courane01: Next week for the meeting, would we like to do a Zoom holiday hangout instead? BYO (bring your own) cookies.  The #docs team is always talking about cookies, and #marketing about chocolate.

@webcommsat: With marketing hat, we’ve been continuing to work with training in various things and collaboration on the release. More planned this Wednesday. Check our last week’s marketing meeting to know how you can contribute. Apologies if Courtney has already shared this, as I am catching up.

@courane01: Thanks Abha, I didn’t get to share that link. I will be doing a combo effort on rounding up content on Learn to revise/create for the release in conjunction with the contribution opportunities in #marketing with the 5.9 release.

@webcommsat: We’re particularly interested in developer benefits of 5.9 (coreCore Core is the set of software required to run WordPress. The Core Development Team builds WordPress. meeting 20:30 UTC Monday just gone). This is for joint work across teams. Do do share what you think the benefits will be which we could share. Thanks! More on the social media work in development chat notes from last week too under the About page component 

@courane01: Training team began with a vision to help meetupMeetup All local/regional gatherings that are officially a part of the WordPress world but are not WordCamps are organized through https://www.meetup.com/. A meetup is typically a chance for local WordPress users to get together and share new ideas and seek help from one another. Searching for ‘WordPress’ on meetup.com will help you find options in your area. organizers present something at meetups, taking the burden of organizing a topic off.  Can we continue to elevate lesson plans in the Meetup Organizer Newsletter?  I’m thinking of a quick list of what’s new this month, plus suggested topics. Provide both lesson plans and workshops (later as they are merged as well – 1 source per topic)

Make WordPress Communities

Meetup Organizer Newsletter: December 2021

@azhiyadev: Thank you for joining us today.  We will run Friday Office Hour at 11:00 AM UTC and Friday Coffee Hour at 14:00 UTC. Join us again for an upcoming meeting on Tuesday next week at 5:00 PM UTC. Don’t forget to bring your cake, cookies and chocolate for this meeting.  Feel free to continue chatting but I will close the meeting.


Upcoming Meetings

You are welcome to join the team at any time! If you are new to the Training Team, please introduce yourself in the #training channel before the meeting (or anytime!) and feel free to join us in the meeting and participate as you are able.


Training Team Mission

The WordPress training team helps people learn to use, extend, and contribute to WordPress through synchronous and asynchronous learning as well as downloadable lesson plans for instructors to use in live environments, via learn.wordpress.org.

Getting Involved

Everyone is welcome and encouraged to join in, comment on posts, and participate in meetings and on projects.

  1. Getting Involved:- https://make.wordpress.org/training/handbook/getting-started/
  2. About The Team:- https://make.wordpress.org/training/handbook/about/ 
  3. Our Team Blog:- https://make.wordpress.org/training/ 
  4. Our Content Roadmap:- https://trello.com/b/BsfzszRM/wordpress-training-team-lesson-plan-development 
  5. What We Are Currently Working On This Month:- https://make.wordpress.org/training/category/sprint/
  6. Learn WordPress Roadmap:- https://trello.com/b/rK1tztAA/learn-wordpress 
  7. Learn WordPress Issues Log:- https://github.com/WordPress/learn
  8. Our Lesson Plans:- https://learn.wordpress.org/lesson-plans/
  9. Our YouTube Channel:- https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCnxqNA0WORZXWurEP6cNV6w 
  10. Learn Website:- https://learn.wordpress.org/

Training Meeting Agenda for December 14, 2021

Please join us Team Meeting Tuesdays 17:00 UTC OR Office Hour Friday 11:00 UTC OR Coffee Hour Friday 14:00 UTC in the #training Slack channel for our weekly meetings!


This Week’s Agenda

  1. Intro/Welcome
  2. News
    1. Welcome and Support Flow Wranglers
    2. Meeting Note Takers
      1. December 14 – @kemmy99
      2. December 21 – @Webtechpooja
      3. December 28 – no meeting
      4. January 4
      5. January 11
    3. Team Goal Setting 2022
    4. APAC friendly meeting Doodle poll
  3. Upcoming events
    1. State of the Word
    2. WordPress 2021 annual Survey
    3. Social learning spaces
  4. December Sprint
    1. 5.9 Audit
    2. Check-in
      1. What did you commit to last week?
      2. What did you do?
      3. Any blockers?
      4. What will you do next week?
  5. Open Discussions

Upcoming Meetings

You are welcome to join the team at any time! If you are new to the Training Team, please introduce yourself in the #training channel before the meeting (or anytime!) and feel free to join us in the meeting and participate as you are able.


Training Team Mission

The WordPress training team helps people learn to use, extend, and contribute to WordPress through synchronous and asynchronous learning as well as downloadable lesson plans for instructors to use in live environments, via learn.wordpress.org.

Getting Involved

Everyone is welcome and encouraged to join in, comment on posts, and participate in meetings and on projects.

  1. Getting Involved:- https://make.wordpress.org/training/handbook/getting-started/
  2. About The Team:- https://make.wordpress.org/training/handbook/about/ 
  3. Our Team Blog:- https://make.wordpress.org/training/ 
  4. Our Content Roadmap:- https://trello.com/b/BsfzszRM/wordpress-training-team-lesson-plan-development 
  5. What We Are Currently Working On This Month:- https://make.wordpress.org/training/category/sprint/
  6. Learn WordPress Roadmap:- https://trello.com/b/rK1tztAA/learn-wordpress 
  7. Learn WordPress Issues Log:- https://github.com/WordPress/learn
  8. Our Lesson Plans:- https://learn.wordpress.org/lesson-plans/
  9. Our YouTube Channel:- https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCnxqNA0WORZXWurEP6cNV6w 
  10. Learn Website:- https://learn.wordpress.org/

#learn-wordpress, #training, #training-team

Recap for Training Team Meeting December 7, 2021

Slack Log (Requires SlackSlack Slack is a Collaborative Group Chat Platform https://slack.com/. The WordPress community has its own Slack Channel at https://make.wordpress.org/chat/. login to view. Set one up if you don’t have a Slack account.)

The agenda for the meeting can be found here

Introductions and Welcome

In attendance: @rkohilakis @azhiyadev @arasae @courane01 @webtechpooja @boogah @peteringersoll @meher @weblink @onealtr

Welcoming the newcomers joining the team (Slack usernames): @Razon Komar Pal @djp424 @Hasanuzzaman

News

Meeting Note Takers

Meeting recap notes is one of the best ways to get started contributing to a team. Please refer to this guide to get started.

  1. December 14 – @Makinde Ruth Oluwakemi
  2. December 21 – @Webtechpooja
  3. December 28 – no meeting
  4. January 4
  5. January 11

We are looking for note-takers for January, Interested? Let us know!

We’d still like a few folks to help provide access to the team site during meetings and welcome anyone along. Interested? Let us know

Team Goal Setting 2022

On Dec 6 at 7:00 PM UTC team met for a goal-setting meeting as we look ahead to 2022. This was fantastic. We used a Miro board (like virtual sticky notes).  We have frames 1-4 mostly done. We will continue to work on this async and review it next week on Dec 13 at the same time.

IST Timezone meetings

We are looking at APAC-friendly meetings again.  We have a number of contributors in the APAC regions that read our posts async. I will share the doodle link soon. Please vote if you are interested.

Upcoming events

  1. Discussion groups/social learning spaces
  2. State of the Word
  3. Related – please complete the WP 2021 Survey in red at the top of .org sites

Sprint

December Sprint
As agreed if you were working on anything in November, you can continue to work on this. We are holding off on creating new content until we can assess what we have for the 5.9 release. We especially need help reviewing lesson plans for versions of WordPress depicted and workshops for WP version + Included Content taxonomies

For reference on updates please see

https://make.wordpress.org/training/2021/09/24/preparing-learn-for-wordpress-updates/

Progress

Hugh has posted updates on the GitHubGitHub GitHub is a website that offers online implementation of git repositories that can can easily be shared, copied and modified by other developers. Public repositories are free to host, private repositories require a paid subscription. GitHub introduced the concept of the ‘pull request’ where code changes done in branches by contributors can be reviewed and discussed before being merged be the repository owner. https://github.com/ issues for Learn.

To keep everyone in the loopLoop The Loop is PHP code used by WordPress to display posts. Using The Loop, WordPress processes each post to be displayed on the current page, and formats it according to how it matches specified criteria within The Loop tags. Any HTML or PHP code in the Loop will be processed on each post. https://codex.wordpress.org/The_Loop. without you having to review GitHub issues – a few neat updates to Learn just went live:

  • Page titles now match the other content types (so the title appears in the same way and the menu + search box is there on pages now too)
  • Placeholder and betaBeta A pre-release of software that is given out to a large group of users to trial under real conditions. Beta versions have gone through alpha testing in-house and are generally fairly close in look, feel and function to the final product; however, design changes often occur as part of the process. courses are now hidden from search results, since they shouldn’t have been there in the first place
  • All metaMeta Meta is a term that refers to the inside workings of a group. For us, this is the team that works on internal WordPress sites like WordCamp Central and Make WordPress. data for lesson plans and workshops now links back to the filtered archive page to show other content with that same meta data (e.g. the lesson plan target audience links to the archive page showing all lesson plans tagged with that target audience)

Check-in

  1. What did you commit to last week?
  2. What did you do?
  3. Any blockers?
  4. What will you do next week?

@arasae:

  1. IIRC, I was working on the Clone/Copy a site. However, that led me to think that it would be helpful to create a workshop on local installation, so
  2. I have workshop rough drafts in process for both those topics
  3. Just life. In theory, the last of my blockers has passed for now! :smile:
  4. I should have at least one workshop completed for review by next meeting.

@courane01:

  1. preparing for goal settings
  2. attended goal settings
  3. need to finish
  4. Finish goal setting AND work 4 hrs on auditing Learn for WP updates. Also run through https://make.wordpress.org/test/2021/11/30/help-test-wordpress-5-9-features/ to help me spot any areas that we should update.

@rkohilakis:

  1. Hmm, I don’t know if I commit to anything.  I’ve been working on the FSE course.
  2. I posted the rough draft of FSE course to the team channel.  Would love some content and flow-related feedback!
  3. Just feeling stressed about the quality of the course and if it would actually help a new user get started right away with FSE design.  I think it would, but I am severely doubting myself!
  4. My goal for next week is to incorporate any public feedback so that I can get this course out before the 5.9 release 

@azhiyadev:

  1. I think we all did the team goal setting and review of brand content.
  2. Reviewed brand content and I have started to audit our TrelloTrello Project management system using the concepts of boards and cards to organize tasks in a sane way. This is what the make.wordpress.com/marketing team uses for example: https://trello.com/b/8UGHVBu8/wp-marketing. boards and will continue to do so
  3. Time
  4. I will continue to audit our boards – @hlashbrooke I will need help reviewing the functionality board

@boogah:

  1. Haven’t made any commitments yet. About to tho. :sweat_smile:
  2. See above.
  3. Nope.
  4. I plan on signing up to facilitate a social learning space on improving site performance.

@webtechpooja:

  1. I haven’t committed anything for last week
  2. I attended goal setting meeting 
  3. Nope
  4. Auditing lesson plans for WP 5.9 version

Open Discussions

Question: for social learning spaces – can anyone sign up to facilitate?

 Answer: There is a signup form to facilitate on learn.wordpress.org/social-learning

https://make.wordpress.org/training/handbook/social-learning/applying-to-facilitate/

We discussed the rotation of email support for Help scout and adding the Social learning space section into the handbook.


Upcoming Meetings

You are welcome to join the team at any time! If you are new to the Training Team, please introduce yourself in the #training channel before the meeting (or anytime!) and feel free to join us in the meeting and participate as you are able.


Training Team Mission

The WordPress training team helps people learn to use, extend, and contribute to WordPress through synchronous and asynchronous learning as well as downloadable lesson plans for instructors to use in live environments, via learn.wordpress.org.

Getting Involved

Everyone is welcome and encouraged to join in, comment on posts, and participate in meetings and on projects.

  1. Getting Involved:- https://make.wordpress.org/training/handbook/getting-started/
  2. About The Team:- https://make.wordpress.org/training/handbook/about/ 
  3. Our Team Blog:- https://make.wordpress.org/training/ 
  4. Our Content Roadmap:- https://trello.com/b/BsfzszRM/wordpress-training-team-lesson-plan-development 
  5. What We Are Currently Working On This Month:- https://make.wordpress.org/training/category/sprint/
  6. Learn WordPress Roadmap:- https://trello.com/b/rK1tztAA/learn-wordpress 
  7. Learn WordPress Issues Log:- https://github.com/WordPress/learn
  8. Our Lesson Plans:- https://learn.wordpress.org/lesson-plans/
  9. Our YouTube Channel:- https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCnxqNA0WORZXWurEP6cNV6w 
  10. Learn Website:- https://learn.wordpress.org/

#learn-wordpress, #training, #training-team

December 2021 Team Sprint

The Training team is using the Sprint method to determine what we are working on and to determine our timeframe for delivery.

What is a Sprint?

Sprints are fixed length events of one month or less to create consistency. A new Sprint starts immediately after the conclusion of the previous Sprint.

https://www.scrum.org/resources/what-is-a-sprint-in-scrum

Sprint Goals

Audit of Learn for 5.9 Release (high priority)

Preparing Learn content for future WordPress updates.

Team Goal Setting

Looking back at our progress over the past year and looking ahead to next year, join us.

Audit

  1. Learn content roadmap Trello board @azhiyadev
  2. Learn functionality Trello board @azhiyadev
  3. Learn Team members Trello board @azhiyadev
  4. Fix 404 errors on Learn

Continue working on

Workshops

  1. Keeping your site secure @arasae
  2. Migrating/cloning a site @arasae
  3. Query loopLoop The Loop is PHP code used by WordPress to display posts. Using The Loop, WordPress processes each post to be displayed on the current page, and formats it according to how it matches specified criteria within The Loop tags. Any HTML or PHP code in the Loop will be processed on each post. https://codex.wordpress.org/The_Loop. @arasae
  4. Installing WordPress locally @arasae
  5. BlockBlock Block is the abstract term used to describe units of markup that, composed together, form the content or layout of a webpage using the WordPress editor. The idea combines concepts of what in the past may have achieved with shortcodes, custom HTML, and embed discovery into a single consistent API and user experience. directory @west7
  6. Navigation block @west7
  7. Organizing your Media Library @west7

Courses

  1. User Facing Full Site Editing (FSE) – Part 1 @rkohilakis
  2. User FSE – Part 2 @west7

Upcoming Meetings

You are welcome to join the team at any time! If you are new to the Training Team, please introduce yourself in the #training channel before the meeting (or anytime!) and feel free to join us in the meeting and participate as you are able.


Training Team Mission

The WordPress training team helps people learn to use, extend, and contribute to WordPress through synchronous and asynchronous learning as well as downloadable lesson plans for instructors to use in live environments, via learn.wordpress.org.

Getting Involved

Everyone is welcome and encouraged to join in, comment on posts, and participate in meetings and on projects. Here’s what you need to know to get started.

  1. Getting Involved:- https://make.wordpress.org/training/handbook/getting-started/
  2. About The Team:- https://make.wordpress.org/training/handbook/about/ 
  3. Our Team Blog:- https://make.wordpress.org/training/ 
  4. Our Content Roadmap:- https://trello.com/b/BsfzszRM/wordpress-training-team-lesson-plan-development 
  5. What We Are Currently Working On This Month:- https://make.wordpress.org/training/category/sprint/
  6. Learn WordPress Roadmap:- https://trello.com/b/rK1tztAA/learn-wordpress 
  7. Learn WordPress Issues Log:- https://github.com/WordPress/learn
  8. Our Lesson Plans:- https://learn.wordpress.org/lesson-plans/
  9. Our YouTube Channel:- https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCnxqNA0WORZXWurEP6cNV6w 
  10. Learn Website:- https://learn.wordpress.org/

#learn-wordpress, #training, #training-team