I would absolutely love to know more about developers' relationship with version control. Which systems they use, how competent they are with them, how they learned to use them, that sort of thing.
Some context for my suggestion:
I recently got my bachelor's in software engineering from Mississippi State University. It wasn't until my very last semester that I realized that literally nothing in the coursework or lectures touched upon version control, or really even nudged students toward even looking into it on their own. It was just a skill I had picked up while working on my own personal projects and getting involved in open source. This means that a lot of students just don't learn about it, which sucks. I had to spend a not-insignificant amount of time at the beginning of nearly every group project giving people a crash course in git, and looking back, I'm actually kind of surprised it took me until my last semester to see the pattern. This was even the case for my senior project group, who were all second semester seniors.
I thought this was probably a problem specific to my institution, but upon getting a job and moving out of state, I have learned that this is not the case. I am very interested to know if version control's absence in the curriculum is a widespread problem.