These individual flowers take their turn in the sun.
While the foxglove provides the poisonous digitalis
we used to play 'popping' the flowers.
Changing
Our Education System One Programmer At A Time
Editor's note: Jon Auerbach is a partner at CRV,
which is an investor in Udacity and The Flatiron School.
In the off chance you've been sleeping under a rock with no Wi-Fi
for the past 20 years,
here's some news: The U.S. educational system is under attack from
multiple fronts
and is on the verge of being reshaped by a profound entrepreneurial
uprising.
This is acutely evident in higher education. Colleges are in an
unsustainable arms race
of spending on non-teaching lures – football stadiums and
sushi-laden cafeterias –
to attract students who can neither afford the cost of education
nor find jobs to repay their debt once they're out in the real
world.
With more than $1.1 trillion of outstanding student debt,
up to 40 percent of recent college grads are either unemployed or
underemployed.
In 2010, the unemployment rate for young workers aged 16-24 hit
19.6 percent,
the highest since the Bureau of Labor Statistics began tracking
unemployment in 1947.
The next time you go to an amusement park,
think that one in four park workers has a college degree.
As is often the case, change is coming from entrepreneurs looking
to reshape education.
After all, this stems from a real need on the part of startups to
attract and retain great engineers.
In most startups, the hardest jobs to fill
are positions in core technology, product design
and product management.
Educational startups used to be off-limits for entrepreneurs.
The space was filled with a collection of schools and
administrators resisting change
and innovation. But in the past few years, two things have
happened that offer real opportunity.
First, the state of education is being challenged by systemic
problems.
And as software has become more approachable to the masses,
it has led to a grassroots movement toward innovation in
education.
The first forays into educational overhaul were companies like Khan Academy,
which that took educational content and re-packaged it into forms
that youth could relate to.
The snack-size learning modules of Khan Academy mirrored videos
that students were watching
in their free time, and they became hits in their own right on
YouTube.
A second wave of entrepreneurs then created massive open online
courses, or MOOCs,
with more in-depth content in the form of start-to-finish courses.
Companies like Udacity, Coursera, Udemy and others give students an
opportunity
to take longer-length classes on their own time and often for
free. And they aren't alone.
In the last several years, we've seen the rise of other online
coding programs like Codecademy, which became popular after helping its
students get into coding through
its initial New Year's Resolution challenge.
In fewer than 48 hours, Codecademy was able to sign up 97,000
students.
These companies are all exploiting a huge gap in American
education.
In 2013, only about 31,000 students in the U.S.
took the Advanced Placement Computer Science (CS) exam.
This was less than 1 percent of total AP exams for the year
and about the same number as those who took the Studio Art 2-D
Design AP exam.
By contrast, nearly half a million American students took the AP
English exam.
One reason for this disparity is a dearth of trained CS teachers
in middle and high schools.
With few trained teachers, even students interested in learning CS
in high school
have no formal option – last year,
one student in the entire state of Mississippi took the AP CS
exam.
Now a third wave of startups is sprouting up to tackle the dearth
of vocational CS training
with intense, in-person training. Companies like The
Flatiron School, which I recently invested in,
and the Turing School, are teaching students in short-term immersion programs.
They tend to attract very motivated students, many of them
mid-career
in non-technical professions, who spend day and night learning
coding over short periods of time. After completing their programs, the
students have the technical skills employers are looking for, and they are
highly marketable. In fact, Flatiron boasts nearly 100 percent job placement.
These schools are tapping into a large societal demand.
Vocational training is the wedge to begin a 21st century
institution of higher learning.
And the schools are in good company. As Avi Flombaum, one of
Flatiron's founders,
likes to remind people that Harvard was started in 1636 as a
vocational training school
to prepare a future generation of clergymen.
http://techcrunch.com/2014/04/12/changing-our-education-system-one-programmer-at-a-time/
Introduction to Turbo Charged Reading YouTube
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you’d like to check out my sister blogs:
www.innermindworking.blogspot.com gives many ways
for you to work with the stresses of life
www.ourinnerminds.blogspot.com which takes
advantage of the experience and expertise of others.
www.happyartaccidents.blogspot.com
just for fun.
To
quote the Dr Seuss himself, “The more that you read, the more things you will
know.
The
more that you learn; the more places you'll go.”
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