The bare bones is supplied in Equations 7.13-7.15 in the link atty supplied. What is missing is how to obtain the Christoffel connection, gamma from g and how to obtain the Riemann tensor, R from gamma, and lastely how to contract the Riemann tensor to the Ricci tensor.
So if you find the missing equations (4.86 and 3.67 in the same paper), that would be halfway there, but you would need to apply index notation to get from one to the other.
...or there's eq. 3.77 which defines the Riemann tensor in terms of the metric for you. Now you still have the mysterious elements that look like subscipted partial derivative operators--and in fact, they are.
\partial_{\mu} = \frac{\partial}{\partial x^{\mu}}
However, once you have the Reimann tensor, or the Einsten tensor derived from it, it might be nice to look at, but I don't think it would give you much sense of what curvature is like in the Schwazchild metric.