Divepod – summer program to learn computer science using an advisory model
Hello HN! I'm running a summer program to each students computer science using an advisory model.
https://divepod.to
The general design is that, rather than using a fixed curriculum, an advisor would put together a flexible learning plan and adapt to the student's interests and needs (introducing new topics, covering missing fundamentals, etc). And by involving students in the design process, we'll help them learn how to learn and eventually drive their own education. we'd cover non-technical topics, if they come up, including how to build your professional networks, how to work in teams, how to better communicate/persuade. The summer program is primarily designed for students in high school or university.
Part of what motivated us to start this program was recognizing that the engineers we enjoyed working with have a lot of self-directed experiences (making stuff out of interest/curiosity). And that the ability to self-learn gives people agency to improve themselves quicker and adapt to new things. But most kids/students don't get many opportunities to train these self-learning skills early on, when they'd be most impactful. Sometimes it's because they're too busy with the school grind or often their self-esteem is so compromised they give up too quickly. Since there are so many free and accessible instructional materials online, the "bottleneck" seems to be having someone to talk to, to figure out their interests, and to work things out.
I'm looking for comments/feedback! Curious to hear, if you could go back in time, how would you have designed your own education.
This sounds wonderful!
This is exactly how I did design my education, back in the 1980-1990s: self-driven, curiosity-based, highly experiential, with (informal) advisers and mentors. I never got a degree at all, and have never regretted it.
After reading over the website, the only thing I'd add to the program values is historical context and philosophy/ethics of technology. Doesn't have to be super-heavy, but I think there's a big problem today where people not only reinvent the wheel (which is sometimes appropriate) but aren't even aware the wheel existed before.
Thank you! In some ways, I feel like we are re-inventing the apprenticeship type of model.
And to your point regarding history/ethics/philosophy, these topics come up inevitably. In the earlier experiments we've done, the discussions can turn very philosophical. A part of me wants to include these topics in the website, but another part says it might scare off some students who may not recognize the relevance yet.