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New Developer School Launches in Kenya

moringaA new developer school will on January 12 2015 open its doors to developers in Kenya to help them to learn mobile and web development skills from top mentors and instructors from around the world in an immersive environment.
Dubbed Moringa School, the school promises to offer an intensive 12-week program and is looking for high-potential, proactive students to fill it’s pilot class mentored taught by teams from Hack Reactor and as well mentored by Dave Hoover, the founder of DevBootcamp.

Speaking exclusively to TechMoran, Audrey Cheng, Co-founder Moringa School, writer at HuffingtonPost said, “We’ve partnered with Hack Reactor, the top U.S.-based code school, to establish a data-driven curriculum on Android, Ruby on Rails, UI/UX skills and more. During the 12 weeks, students will also have the opportunity to gain hands-on experience at an internship. At the end of the program, our students will have the skills necessary for a junior-level Android development position.”

Moringa School will be the third such school to launch code classes in Kenya, as demand for ultra-awesome developers increase. The Nairobi Dev School, an non-profit veture is now a little over a year-old while US’s Andela announced it will establish base in Nairobi soon, after Nigeria.

Cheng told TechMoran that Moringa School aims to fill a market gap, she and her partner saw in the Kenyan market.

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“There’s definitely a market for our class. My partner and I went to a number of universities in order to gauge interest for our class. We found that students didn’t think what they were learning at university was enough to find a job because rather than learning practical application of computer programming, they were learning theory that they didn’t know how to apply,” Cheng said.

Cheng and her co-founder Frank Tamre also found that many students were willing to pay for an intensive 12-week course that will equip them with skills, experience and a portfolio to come out as junior mobile and web developers.

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With the proliferation of online services such as Coursera, edX, codeacademy, YouTube tutorials among others, Moringa School remains adamant that physical classes matter a ton because learning to code–and code well–is hard as there are numerous roadblocks that new developers face and are tough to overcome without the proper community and support to guide them in their learning.

Moringa School will therefore give the students the power of a developer community which will inspire them to support each other and propel their learning beyond the instructor’s imagination.

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 “In terms of online tutorials, I’ve personally completed various online tutorials and Codeacademy as well, and believe they are great supplements to physical classes, but do not go in depth enough to encourage exploration beyond what is taught,” says Cheng, who also had a stint as an associate at African-focused Savannah Fund.
The two have partnered with Hack Reactor and Dave Hoover, the founder of DevBootcamp in the US. Code School and Hack Reactor are the best and top-performing code school in the US with a job placement rate of 99% and Moringa School admires their culture and work ethic and want to emulate a number of their characteristics. Code School will supply materials for Moringa School’s pre-program to prepare students weeks before the class officially begins.

At the moment, the school is focused on finding the best students for its pilot class and is calling for applications here. Moringa School’s curricular is listed here.

Unlike Nairobi Dev School, Moringa School is a for-profit business and believes it has value for the market. The Android-focused school co-founders say they believe in people’s potential and know that Kenyans can be as globally competitive in programming as anyone else in the world and want to open more jobs and opportunities to local Android developers by giving them world-class training.

With such initiatives, the government doesn’t have to spend $6,000 per student annually on post-university training sessions.

 

 

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Sam Wakoba
Sam Wakobahttp://techmoran.com
Taking you on tour through Africa's tech and business ecosystem, one story at a time since 2010! Based out of Nairobi, Kenya, Sam is the founder and managing director of Moran Media, which runs  TechMoran.com, various other digital platforms and a startup incubation hub for Kenya's youthful entrepreneurs. Drop me a mail at [email protected]

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