** Disclaimer: All subject to review, change, and overall better scrappiness **
- Self study group that follows hungry academy course
- Pick one open source project to contribute to
- Invite Ruby community members to weekly meetings as mentors
- Prone to action
- Write code, we don't care if it sucks, we'll get better
- Building over talking
- Disagreements are settled with code
- Have fun along the way!
- Collaborative
- 3 months
- Start in the first two weeks of March
- Meet at least once a week
- Remote pair sessions
- Complete 2-4 full day hackathons in 3 months
- Something specific i.e. Open source, Focused learning, etc.
- Collaborative
- Tools
- Chatroom (Campfire/Hipchat)
- Forum
- Github
- Integrate into local meetups with evening learn/hacks
- Sponsorships to cover space and/or offer stuff (dinner, beer, etc) as a thanks to mentors
- My current strategy is to use this material heavily. I have worked through some of the material and it was helpful.
- This is a heavy rails course that would overlap with the jumpstartlab materials.
- For pure Ruby tutorials, I have used it and found it to be enjoyable. +1 for making it easy for folks picking of their first programming language.
- For learning front end dev (CSS, Sass, js, etc.)
-
http://schneems.com/beginner-to-builder-2011
- 8 one hour classes followed by assigned course work from Agile Web Development with Rails version 4
-
- Learning git
- Living Social / Hungry Academy
Week One:
- http://tutorials.jumpstartlab.com/projects/jsmerchant.html
- Provide notes on difference in Rails 2.3 to 3.0 way, help fill in gaps, and note bugs/errors
- What else?
Scrappy Acadamy naming credit goes to @tourdedave
Jason - This is looking really good so far. My preference is to use the books and tutorials listed as starting points, but to quickly move towards building team and individual projects. There's a big gap between following a tutorial and actually synthesizing your own code, and that's what I'd look to Scrappy Academy to help with. This is coming from someone who finished the tutorial on ruby.railstutorial.org though. Do you think other participants would be open to getting to a certain minimum level before our first meeting, as Sean suggests?