openwebwork
The Webwork Project is an organization of mathematicians and technologists supporting the WeBWorK open source online homework system.
Funding Links: https://github.com/sponsors/openwebwork
- Name: WeBWorK -- Open Source Online Homework System
- Location: University of Rochester, Washington DC, etc.
- Kind: organization
- Followers: 66
- Following: 0
- Total stars: 513
- Repositories count: 26
- Created at: 2022-11-03T07:18:21.537Z
- Updated at: 2025-03-28T13:43:10.853Z
- Last synced at: 2025-03-28T13:43:10.853Z
GitHub Sponsors Profile
Vision statement
“Ask the questions you should, not just the ones you can.”
To continue on-going research into harnessing the internet to improve STEM education. To develop software and best practices that extends the capabilities of online homework/ intentional practice in order to enable and promote active learning.
Mission statement
The WeBWorK Project (TWP) is the administrative umbrella supporting the open source WeBWorK on-line homework system, and its goals are:
Sustain and improve the system
Increase its user, developer, and consultant/support bases to include those who would reasonably be interested in and benefit from engagement with WeBWorK
Manage and provide leadership for development of the system and the Open Problem Library of WeBWorK problems
Monitor and provide the contact point for academic and commercial uses of the WeBWorK system
TWP affirms and supports the development, promotion, and use of open source software and open resources in general, and seeks collaborations and supportive relationships with other open source projects and commercial and other ventures that support and honor the goals of open source software.
The WeBWorK Project (TWP) is a registered 501(c)(3) organizations and donations are tax deductible in the United States. Go to Donation tiers
Community principles
The WeBWorK Project does not discriminate on the basis of race, sex, age, religion, creed, color, handicap, disability, veteran status, national origin, ancestry, sexual orientation or any other hitherto unknown discriminatory method for discerning an individual from another individual in a negative fashion.
The WeBWorK Project will not allow exclusive licenses for work created by or donated to the TWP. No-one will be able to license exclusive access to our materials. (They can create exclusive derivatives, for example some have created proprietary questions, but most question developed have been contributed to the community under CC-SA-BY-NC ).
Important WeBWorK sites
wiki: https://webwork.maa.org/wiki
bugzilla: https://bugs.webwork.maa.org
request tracker: https://rt.webwork.maa.org
forums (moodle): https://webwork.maa.org/forums
blog aggregator (planet): https://webwork.maa.org/planet
github repos: https://github.com/openwebwork
demo / overview: https://demo.webwork.rochester.edu/public
Board Members
President: Gavin Larose, [email protected]; http://www.math.lsa.umich.edu/~glarose/
Past President: Robin Cruz, [email protected]), https://github.com/Robin-Cruz
Treasurer: John Travis, [email protected], https://github.com/drjt
Technical Manger: Danny Glin, [email protected], https://github.com/dlglin
Program Coordinator: Marianna Bonanome, [email protected],
Business Manager: Monica VanDieren, [email protected],
Secretary: Timothy Flowers, [email protected], -
WeBWorK co-founder: Michael Gage, [email protected], https://github.com/mgage
History and use of funds
WeBWorK was founded in 1996 by Prof. Michael Gage and Prof. Arnold Pizer, professors in the mathematics department at the University of Rochester, and further developed with support by grants from the NSF under the leadership of Gage, Pizer and Dean Vicki Roth. In 2009 they partnered with the Mathematics Association of America (MAA) and received a 5 year "dissemination" grant to expand WeBWorK's use at a few dozen universities/colleges to many more institutions. Currently, there are at least 750 institutions using WeBWorK. A map of institutions that have used WeBWorK for at least one course is at https://webwork.maa.org/wiki/WeBWorK_Sites. The TWP was formed in 2018 to oversee the continued development of WeBWorK and to seek new partners, collaborators and sponsors.
While we were getting started we were generously supported by the NSF and almost all of our funds were spent on training webinars for creating WeBWorK courses, writing new WeBWorK questions and installing WeBWorK servers on campus. Now that we are launched your contributions help us to continue this effort.
In addition to training we sponsor "code camps", hack-a-thon like meetings for developing webwork core code, providing new features, insuring accessibility and correctings bugs.
The code camps encouraged casual WeBWorK users to become more deeply involved in the product by bringing them together with experienced developers. (e.g. https://webwork.maa.org/pluto.starter/build/planet.starter.html#17,
https://michaelgage.blogspot.com/2013/07/ ). We funded lodging/meal and travel
expenses -- labor was volunteered.
Please contribute to The WeBWorK Project and/or if you would like to participate in efforts to make our organization run and/or to work on coding projects contact our Community Manager [email protected]
- Current Sponsors: 8
- Past Sponsors: 5
- Total Sponsors: 13
- Minimum Sponsorship: $5.00
Featured Works
openwebwork/webwork2
Course management front end for WeBWorK
Language: Perl - Stars: 150openwebwork/pg
Problem rendering engine for WeBWorK
Language: Perl - Stars: 46openwebwork/webwork-open-problem-library
A library of WeBWorK problems contributed by the OpenWeBWorK community
Language: PostScript - Stars: 241Active Sponsors
Past Sponsors
Sponsor Breakdown
- User: 13