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Introducing Beyond Coding: Free professional skills training for emerging devs in NYC

Today, we’re excited to announce that online registration is now open for Beyond Coding, a free new summer program designed to equip emerging computer programmers in New York City with professional skills needed to help them succeed in their first job working with code. The program, slated to launch June 11, is part of our collaboration with New York City’s Tech Talent Pipeline initiative to support the growth of the city’s tech ecosystem. And we’re thrilled to be taking part, along with some other top-notch New York startups: Crest CC, Foursquare, Kickstarter, Tumblr, and Trello.

This Tech Talent Pipeline initiative, which launched in May 2014, has three objectives: Work with New York companies to help close the skills gap between open jobs and candidates to fill them, provide training and educational opportunities to New York residents, and ultimately, to build a talented and diverse workforce in the tech sector.

Since the program kicked off, we realized that while we are hiring, we’re not doing it fast enough to make a real difference for New Yorkers who want to learn to code. On the other hand, one thing that we do have (thanks to Stack Overflow) is access to a wide range of resources and knowledge that we can offer to the greater community. And several other New York startups fell into the same bucket. So we decided to team up — you know, like a less super-heroic League of Justice — and build out a formal educational curriculum for the New York tech community.

With nearly five open jobs for every available software developer, the need for qualified technical talent is higher than ever. In New York City alone, there are 13,000 firms hiring for highly sought-after skills, such as web development, mobile development, and user-interface design. To meet this demand, it’s critical to get more talented people coding, and do it fast.

Beyond Coding’s goal is not to teach hard coding skills; it’s to ensure that anyone in this city with a passion for technology can get the mentoring, training, and support they need to succeed as a developer. The curriculum is designed to accelerate the learning curve for new programmers by attacking skills gaps that often prevent talented young developers from actually landing jobs. We’ll cover professional networking, technical communication skills, the best way to prepare for a technical interview, and what happens next: how to continue learning programming skills beyond the classroom.

The Beyond Coding program is open to anybody in the New York City area with an understanding of coding and is currently looking for a job as a software developer or a related role, but lacks access to tools, resources, or a professional network they need to succeed. Once the 10-week program concludes, students will receive a formal certification and be introduced to top tech companies in New York City who are hiring junior-level developers.

This is just one of the ways that we’re working to promote inclusion both here, and in the tech community as a whole. But we’re still figuring out how we can make a positive difference, so we welcome any feedback or ideas you may have. And if you live in New York City, are learning to code and can use a little help kickstarting your new career, you can apply at beyondcoding.io.

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13 Comments

Robert Harvey May 5 2015

There’s a related discussion about this blog post at https://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/255983

notabot May 5 2015

Are blog comments borked? This is a test.

Flamey May 5 2015

beyondcoding.io is very poorly made. I see a 2s FOUC and it takes a total of ~10s to load. It makes 2 XHR of style.less & base.less for no apparent reason… It gets 49% on google pagespeed and fails google’s mobile-friendly test.

It seems like it was made by an… erm… “emerging computer programmer” that vamped on Stack Overflow just enough to get rep whores to piece together crappy jQuery code. This is embarrassing.

Looks nice for beginners. Wish I was there.

Miki May 5 2015

An Apple logo displayed prominently, and centrally, as the first starkly-contrasting element in the layout. Training them young, eh?

Jaime May 5 2015

I think this is fabulous! There are so many skill outside of “coding” that a new developer needs to hone to be hirable!

And the comments on this blog are a great first step in teaching the soft skill of ripping apart another’s work instead of pitching in to make it better!!

I love coding! This is Great work. Thank you for information. I wish you much success…

Neeharika May 5 2015

Great initiative, got me excited only to realize that this was for NY residents only.
Is there anyway you could make this online? Coding techniques would be appreciated anywhere.

this is worth a try…..

anonybody May 5 2015

Unfortunately, not interesting at all for most of us – who are not New Yorkers.

You forgot the tag for the site :)

Aah damn, wanted to say that you forgot the title tag for the site, got stripped from my last comment :p

Clara May 6 2015

Every time I see companies complaining about a ‘skill gap’ or a ‘lack of candidates’ I automatically translate it from business speak to plain English and it comes out as ‘we won’t pay for developers’.

There’s a very easy and very simple way to get the programmers you want: pay them a good wage


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