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I'm an instructor teaching web development to adults. For their final projects, instead of coming to us with typos or other small issues, I'd like to set up a sub-section of Stack Overflow that would allow the other students to help each other, learn how to use Stack Overflow, and serve as a temporary knowledge base for the students.

This subsection would be private-ish where the other students can pop in and check to see if someone has already answered their question. It could be deactivated in 2-4 weeks when the course is over.

Does anything like this exist?

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    Not within the Stack Exchange network itself. I recall seeing a question somewhere about Stack Exchange clones- It might be possible to set one of those up to help you. Edit: You can find that list here on MSE. I don't know for sure if it'll help you or not, but worth looking at.
    – Kendra
    Mar 28, 2016 at 19:58
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    Closely related on MSE: Classroom specific Stack Exchange site See also (something along these lines was done, but I don't know its fate): What is story behind the edX Stack Exchange sites?
    – jscs
    Mar 28, 2016 at 20:02
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    You'd be better off setting up something like OSQA: dzonesoftware.com/products/open-source-question-answer-software
    – JonH
    Mar 28, 2016 at 20:12
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    As JonH, OSQA or perhaps Shapado (where we moved iRosetta to (now defunc due to DNS non-renewal)). See Stack Exchange clones for a wider selection. Mar 28, 2016 at 20:35
  • learn how to use Stack Overflow - Just out of curiosity, will they actually be tested on this? Will they have to do something like create an MCVE from a set of bugged code?
    – BSMP
    Mar 28, 2016 at 20:40
  • @PeterMortensen Thanks for the SUPER clear typo edits! Mar 29, 2016 at 2:07
  • Thanks for the direction guys! I wish I could make @Kendra's answer the solution. Mar 29, 2016 at 2:10

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To mind, there's no formal process that would allow you to do this. The use case is narrow and one-time, so I don't think that Stack Exchange would be willing to invest the time into building something like this out.

You could likely accomplish what you really need with self-hosted forum software.

However, this line caught my attention:

I'd like to set up a sub-section of Stack Overflow that would allow the other students to ..., learn how to use Stack Overflow...

That's the primary motivation behind the Help Center. One learns general things about Stack Overflow, what is considered on and off topic, and what the various things around here mean.

If you were looking for something a bit deeper in terms of the nuances...that's a lot more than you could cover in just a month. We've got users that have been around for years that assume different things of the system...and even I have some assumptions that may not be entirely accurate, and I've been around for almost five years at this point.

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