Flatiron School
Make yourself useful.
Make yourself useful.
When it comes to planning for 21st century careers, there’s nothing quite like the buzzword “startup” to begin a conversation.
Everyone knows Mario. But do you know of his humble beginnings?
Thea McKenna made an impression on her tryout video for the Kode with Karlie Scholarship, donning a programming shirt and getting her cats’ endorsement as well. We asked her some questions and found out why her brother is so important to her, and where she wants to go next.
Code happens to be an incredibly powerful tool for bringing people — who likely never would have met — together around commonality.
Michelle Doan stumbled on the Kode for Karlie Scholarship by a happy accident. As a self-professed aspiring Renaissance woman, Michelle has big ambitions coming through the pipeline.
It starts with great teachers, and the rest grows from there.
With that philosophy in mind, The Flatiron School has taken some of the most talented teachers in the nation and united them for one purpose — to bring programming to the high school level.
Failing is one of those things we’re taught to avoid. It’s positioned in direct opposition of succeeding, in the way of being great at something. Except for one thing— failure feels kind of great.
Kristi talks about software engineering as a second career, how co-founders Adam Enbar and Avi Flombaum came together, high-growth companies, and everything in between.
If Flatiron School knows how to do something, it’s placing their students on a career track they love. That’s why Flatiron’s labs developer Spencer Rogers volunteered his time to help do just that in Providence, RI.