## How to Submit a Tutorial Proposal
This page gives detailed instructions and advice on how to submit a proposal for a tutorial at PyCon.
For general information about tutorials, see [Tutorial Information for Instructors](/2015/speakers/tutorials/instructors/).
For general advice on developing and submitting a proposal see [So You
Want To Present a Talk/Tutorial/Poster at PyCon](/2015/speaking/proposal_advice/), Tutorials given in [2014](/2014/schedule/tutorials), [2013](/2013/schedule/tutorials), and [Past Tutorial Topic Suggestions](/2015/tutorials/suggested_topics/).
### What information to submit
1. First, sign up for a new account or log in to your account.
2. Once you are logged in; proceed to your account dashboard and create a speaker profile.
3. At this point, you can submit tutorials, fill in the fields as follows:
### Title
Give your tutorial a name that accurately describes what it's about to potential students.
### Description
A high-level description of the tutorial, limited to 400 characters.
### Abstract
Try to include the following to help participants decide if this is a good match for them:
- What the tutorial aims to teach students.
- Prerequisites for the tutorial, i.e., what students should know or be able to do before the tutorial. For example, "Students should have at least intermediate-level Python and SQL and have some experience using an ORM."
- Prerequisites for their laptop (assuming one is required). Note that these prerequisites serve two purposes:
1. They may help the potential student understand more precisely what
you plan to teach.
2. They help ensure students arrive with the software they need to
take the tutorial. If possible, finalize these prerequisites and
submit them with your proposal. However, we realize that in some
cases the prerequisites may change as you prepare to teach your
tutorial, and in a few cases the prerequisites will be complex enough
that they'll need their own page on instructions. We're working on
how best to communicate to students in both cases.
- Any information you're providing to reviewers (such as tutorial format or outline) that potential students will also want to know to help them decide if this tutorial is a good match for them.
### Audience Level
At what level of Python and other topic-specific experience or
expertise is the tutorial aiming for? We realize this may be too
narrow for a tutorial, for example if the tutorial is aimed at
Experienced programmers but Novices to Python, but give it your best
shot. If this field doesn't work well, be sure to include a note in
the Additional Notes section, and you may also wish to add to your
Description or Abstract.
### Additional Notes
This is the one section that is for reviewers only, so it should have
lots and lots of information to help reviewers decide which tutorials
to accept, based on both the subject being taught and the ability of
the teacher. The following information should be included:
- Any explanation or fleshing out of the public fields that would help
reviewers.
- Intended audience: more than just novice/intermediate/etc.
Reviewers need to know what level of Python experience/expertise is
targeted but also what level(s) of domain-specific
experience/expertise is targeted, for example networking, SQL,
database, etc.
- Tutorial format: lab, lecture, workshop, etc. However, don't just
pick a label, describe what will happen during the tutorial.
- Interest in tutorial assistants: We're considering making tutorial
assistants available to instructors. These would be volunteers with
Python experience who will provide one-on-one help during the
tutorial when students are working on exercises. If we do this,
would you be interested and if so how many students per assistant
would you want?
- Preferences or requirements with respect to class size or
scheduling.
- Outline: of the tutorial content for reviewers.
- Previous experience: tell us what experience you have in the
subject, in activities such as teaching or public speaking, or
anything else that would help us understand and gauge your abilities
as a tutorial presenter. Ideal would be a link to a video.
- Biography: You'll be asked to enter your biography when you register
on this site and that information will be made public.
However, you may wish to include more information for reviewers to
complement information about your Previous Experience.
### Miscellaneous Notes About Proposals and Tutorials
Here are some notes about the proposal, selection, and delivery process for tutorials.
- There will be some duplication of information between the public
information contained in the Description and Abstract, and the
Additional Notes which only reviewers will read. That duplicate
information is for two different audiences so if you just copy and
paste between them neither will likely be served well. A better
strategy, if you don't want to write two versions, is to reference
the public version (Description and Abstract) in the Additional
Notes for reviewers and then expound on it.
- The tutorial selection process attempts to choose a good variety of
tutorial topics and levels that will be in demand, i.e., it doesn't
just select the best proposals!
- The selection process has also tended to prefer Python-related
topics over more general software development tools or practices
that aren't Python-specific.
- Tutorial are subject to cancellation if enrollment is low. In the
past the cancellation criterion has been less than 10 students
registered.
### Questions or Suggestions
If you have questions about any of this, or suggestions, please contact us at
[email protected].