Here are few suggestions I may give (I'm you would already know many of these).  Some of these may not apply to non-programming courses.
  1. We must teach tasks not tools (teach word-processing not MS Word or oowriter).
  2. We must train them on multiple tools accomplishing same task with more emphasis on FOSS software.
  3. We must start training right from installation of necessary s/w not just using them.
  4. We should encourage learning and understanding command-line tools.  Even on Windows these tools are sometimes useful to get the job done faster.
  5. Piracy must be discouraged with all force possible.  Students must also be made aware of its illegal aspects.  New computer users would only then be able to appreciate the true usefulness of Free and Open-Source Software.
  6. They must be encouraged to involve themselves in development of FOSS.  They can start with bug reports and move upward.
Just my 0.02p.

On Tue, Feb 26, 2008 at 11:42 PM, Shibu C Varughese <shibucv@gmail.com> wrote:
hi ...all,

We can go with words  like  ....     "itmission"

Let's check what other say ... :)
--
Regards,

Shibu C Varughese
"Quality is truly a state of mind"

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Chandra Sekar.S

e-mail: chandru.in@gmail.com
Blog: http://tuxychandru.blogspot.com/

How many Microsoft engineers does it take to change a light bulb?

None. They just declare darkness the new standard.