The second edition of the Drupal Career Starter Program kicked off last week with 20 out-of-work, eager IT professionals looking to jumpstart a new career in Drupal. They’re looking forward to spending 10 weeks learning the fundamentals of Drupal in the classroom, working their way up the Drupal Ladder during their lab hours, and transitioning into a paid internship with one of our Work Experience (WE) Drupal hosts. As if that wasn’t enough to jump-start a Drupal career, we’ve also matched each student with a DrupalEasy Community Mentor that will help guide the student in their 5 mandatory hours of community contributions each week. 20 students and mentors multiplied by 5 hours per week for 10 weeks equals 1,000 hours of community contributions.
We’ve always felt that an individual’s level of Drupal success is directly proportional to their community involvement. Those who don’t leverage the networking and knowledge transfer opportunities of the community are at a distinct disadvantage. It is the DCSP’s goal to give the student every possible advantage from the very start - and this means instilling a strong appreciation for our community.
We were extremely fortunate in the quality and quantity of mentors that applied to be part of this program. Late last week, we completed the matching process of students to mentors and are happy to report the mentors are:
- Andrew Riley (Andrew M Riley)
- Brandon Morrison (Brandonian)
- Chris Shattuck (chrisshattuck)
- Christian Häusler (corvus_ch)
- Damien McKenna (DamienMcKenna)
- Don VanDemark (caelon)
- Emma Jane Hogbin (emmajane )
- Gergely Lekli (Gergely Lekli )
- Greg Knaddison (greggles)
- Jake Strawn (himerus)
- Jeff Burnz (Jeff Burnz)
- Joachim Noreiko (joachim )
- John Learned (JCL324)
- Kay VanValkenburgh (kay_v)
- Kevin Bridges (cyberswat)
- Lev Tsypin (levelos )
- Roy Segall (RoySegall )
- Ryan Price (liberatr)
- Sascha Grossenbacher (Berdir)
- Ted Bowman (tedbow)
- Yuriy Gerasimov (ygerasimov)
Each mentor has committed to spending 1-2 hours per week working directly with their student, helping to teach them effective ways of contributing back to the community. We are encouraging mentors to have students work with modules and/or themes that are of interest to both the mentor and the student, in hopes of providing some reverse karma to the mentors. Ideally, our students will use this opportunity to dive deep into a Drupal project and continue contributing long after they graduate from the DCSP.
As the students progress over the course of the DCSP, we’ll be sure to keep everyone updated on their progress and contributions to the community. We can’t wait to see our future Drupal rock stars develop!
Comments
Rockstar? I hope not - I
Rockstar? I hope not - I should think a mentor should be reliable and with quiet humility. Rockstars are known to be unreliable and egotistical.
This is an AMAZING list. I
This is an AMAZING list. I hope the students appreciate the quality they're getting.
it's wonderful that you're doing this. It's a great service.
Wow! This is really amazing
Wow! This is really amazing project/program! I wish there is one in Beijing where I live. :) Thank you for the inspiration!
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[...] classroom hours, lab hours, and required contributions back to the Drupal community guided by an independent Drupal mentor) through DrupalEasy. DrupalEasy will determine each participant's skill sets/interest and whether [...]
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