Comments on: kid track at rubyconf? /2010/10/kid-track-at-rubyconf/ Sarah Allen's reflections on internet software and other topics Sun, 07 Nov 2010 00:53:22 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.7.1 By: Malcolm Arnold /2010/10/kid-track-at-rubyconf/#comment-711 Sun, 07 Nov 2010 00:53:22 +0000 /?p=2820#comment-711 Hello Sarah,

Great idea and Ruby Nuby would like to partner with you to make this happen. Ruby Nuby teaches RoR, entrepreneurial skills and life skills to at-risk and disadvantaged youth who are sponsored by the professionals who take our courses. They learn alongside each other creating socio-economic bridges. After their 9th grade and completion of Ruby Nuby camp, we place the youths in paid internships/part-time jobs that they work throughout high school. By the time they graduate, they are hire-able as intermediate RoR developers with 4 years experience. Companies that hire our graduates have to pledge full scholarships so the youths can work for them during the day and go to college at night getting their degrees.

Our website is being developed now http://www.rubynuby.net . We have been teaching classes at NYU since Aug 9th, 2010.

Thank you so much for doing this,
Malcolm Arnold
RubyNuby01

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By: Jose Basilio /2010/10/kid-track-at-rubyconf/#comment-710 Tue, 26 Oct 2010 03:54:41 +0000 /?p=2820#comment-710 This is an awesome idea. My 3 older kids (11, 14, and 16) would enjoy learning Ruby in a kid friendly environment.

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By: Obie /2010/10/kid-track-at-rubyconf/#comment-709 Sun, 24 Oct 2010 23:56:26 +0000 /?p=2820#comment-709 My son Liam is 11 and might be able to attend. Thanks for creating what sounds like a wonderful opportunity!

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By: Matt Reider /2010/10/kid-track-at-rubyconf/#comment-708 Thu, 21 Oct 2010 04:49:37 +0000 /?p=2820#comment-708 Hey Sarah! I know I said this to you a couple of weeks ago – before I returned to technology, in 2003, I gave secondary school teaching a whirl, and taught Biology for a bit in San Leandro (CA). Based on that experience, and some of the volunteering I did in the Berkeley Unified School District teaching digital video editing to young children, I would be happy to help you deliver and organize whatever class you end up teaching.

Some opinions…

Forty-five minutes to an hour and a half is about right for each lesson, and I would say two lessons a day max. The other time would be spent applying whatever they learned in building something meaningful.

The Arduino idea sounds PERFECT, in that you could show something, at the beginning, which is a finished piece of work, that the kids could get excited about. They could also make it very personal, so each student could take some time to plan what it is that he or she would like to build, based on an interest, or something relevant to their lives (Dewey: “Text without Context is Pretext”).

I also like that Arduino involves something more than computers. It shows that these skills can be applied to anything that has a chip.

Awesome idea!

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By: Chris /2010/10/kid-track-at-rubyconf/#comment-707 Thu, 21 Oct 2010 04:07:08 +0000 /?p=2820#comment-707 This would be awesome if rubyconf was during summer break, but I’d guess it will be hard for many so close to the winter holiday breaks.

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By: Jay McGavren /2010/10/kid-track-at-rubyconf/#comment-706 Thu, 21 Oct 2010 03:42:27 +0000 /?p=2820#comment-706 Well, you remember the DRb/Ruby-Processing server from mountain.rb, right?

http://gist.github.com/616371
http://gist.github.com/615896

Nick Howard has volunteered to run one for the grownups during the conference; maybe the kids would like to play, too. :)

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By: John Markos O'Neill /2010/10/kid-track-at-rubyconf/#comment-705 Thu, 07 Oct 2010 17:54:17 +0000 /?p=2820#comment-705 I love the idea of a kid track! Unfortunately, my kids are too young to learn to code (5 and 3: they have to learn to read English, first), but I have a 10 year old niece, and my sister is really into the idea of her gaining some technical skills. She had me set up a Linux netbook for her last year. I can’t make it this year, but I’d love to keep an eye on developments in the conference kid-track realm.

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