Different model, though. Not small-group tutoring. I don’t know if that would work, but it’s at least different
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Certification is the issue
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I teach undergraduate-level computer science (unaccredited, no cert/degree, just people who want to learn) and it's viable, but we're very small: 3 teachers, 40-50 students between us at a time
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I think that business might be
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I think adults will make it work first. Adult education gets better every year and eventually student-aged kids will start taking the classes.
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Paulo Friere offers a slightly-different pre-internet version of co-learning that could easily be adapted to the digital age, especially on the introduction of co-learners one-to-another. See " Pedagogy of the Opressed," I beleve.
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I'd hire a self-trained/mentored guy if he's good. The problem is that unless you already have a network getting through the door needs a credential. Now, if the mentors can get you through that door... wait, didn't we call these apprenticeships?
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Ya I think you'd need to combine this with an apprenticeship pipeline. The platform sets you up as an apprentice under someone IRL. Coding boot camps basically do this already with pseudo-guarantee of a job
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