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Nano-hack 19yro runs kids code camps rather than making dotcom $. Needs donation
18 points by usiegj00 on Feb 1, 2012 | hide | past | favorite | 3 comments
tl;dr you should donate to him here:

http://comicmac.com/help-me-setup-dojos/

I met him (James Whelton) once when he detailed his Nano-hacks (at age 17) at Dublin Web Summit. Then again recently (at age 19) where he discussed his home-grown coder dojos that are teaching thousands of kids throughout Ireland and now the US how to program in unpaid after-school workshops. He's inspirational and the best of coder conscience. He's paid a trivial weekly stipend and paying for travel out of pocket. I've donated. Your turn:

http://comicmac.com/help-me-setup-dojos/




Why doesn't he just charge the kids' parents a small fee for the service he is providing?


I agree, parents should be asked to pay a small fee. The cost of a burger will not be bad. I am planning on starting something like that in my children's school if the head will agree. In order not to disadvantage the really needy families, I don't mind teaching such children for free, but that need must be proven in order to stop abuse.


Hey, so there is a couple of reasons we run it for free. Firstly theres no entry barrier, young people from all backgrounds come and kids that don't have laptops we try have spares to let them use. Money we found generally complicates things (where is it going, is there transparency, some locations start wanting rent money, etc). Some people find it hard to grasp also, but free youth activities in Ireland are extremely common.

Regarding abuse, people using it as a glorified babysitting service, etc. We have a rule that if a kid is 12 or under, they must have a parent or guardian there responsible for them. As we're extremely over booked (waiting list of 200 in Dublin), we reserve spots for extremely interested kids, who keep coming back and producing things and leave other slots open. If a kid is being disruptive and won't stop, we tell the parent to calm them down (Extremely useful when working with kids that have autism as some have behavior issues that parents can address there and then)or to take them home.

To date, running it for free has worked extremely well and in every Dojo, theres been little, if no issues. People are volunteering, giving up their time for free and volunteers are normally blunt with parents if its being abused.

We try to remove as much financial dependency from CoderDojo so its easier to set up anywhere and run, individual Dojos can arrange donations or sponsor if they want. In my case, I'm looking for some assistance if people want to give it, helping me setting them up.

@thepreacher thats awesome that you're starting something! If you want a hand please drop me an email: james@coderdojo.com, theres definitely some advice on things we've learned and resources we can give you!




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