Free One-on-One Programming Mentorships With Recurse Center

I’m a big fan of Recurse Center (formerly known as Hacker School**), a free educational retreat for programmers. RC’s commitment to Computer Science education and diversity therein is nothing short of impressive, and they officially announced today an exciting new experimental program.

“RC Start” will provide beginning programmers with free one-on-one mentorships with an RC Retreat alum. 

Recurse Center has made the headlines a few times in the past. I’ve talking with them about their grants for women in 2012 (the Etsy Hacker School Grants) and again in 2014 for expanding the grants to all Computer Science minorities (women, African Americans, non-white Hispanics, Native Americans, and Pacific Islanders).

Recurse Center.

What Recurse Center is trying to accomplish with this new program is a little different, though. The retreat usually attracts people already committed to programming, whereas RC Start will aim to provide resources for beginners. You’ll presumably have already worked through your fair share of coding tutorials and books and whatnot, but you may wonder “what now?” or “why is none of this working?!”

The mentorships will consist of three 45-minute one-on-one sessions, either online or in person, and what gets covered is entirely up to you. You can ask questions, seek advice, request code reviews, and/or set goals for your future.

Related Post

RC Start is a limited-time offer, for now. The Recurse Center is setting up this program as an experiment and will judge in a couple of months whether to pursue it in the future based on demand and feedback. So if you’re interested, apply now!

**If you’re curious about the name change from Hacker School to Recurse Center, it’s a pretty interesting story in itself. The summary is that it turns out people have somewhat of a negative connotation attached to Hacker, and Hacker School wasn’t really a school in the traditional (with curriculums and such). Recurse Center it is, then!

Liked it? Take a second to support GeekMom and GeekDad on Patreon!

This post was last modified on December 7, 2017 10:34 pm

Ariane Coffin

Ariane is a programmer married to another programmer. Together they have two little girls who don't stand a chance against their nerdy lineage.

Share
Published by

Recent Posts

Cats: The Jellicle Ball Is Trans and Queer Joy

Trans rights are human rights. In a world where trans rights keep being taken away,…

March 31, 2026

Half City by Kate Golden

I really didn’t want another story about a young adult attending a magical school, but…

March 26, 2026

Perfect for Spring, Marimekko Brings Bold Color and Design to Stationery

Bring springtime and color into your home with Marimekko stationery items.

March 9, 2026

The Winter Goddess by Megan Barnard

The fight between winter and the onset of spring is something we know well in…

February 18, 2026

If you are looking for a way to escape this never ending January, a trip…

January 30, 2026

‘Mouse Guard: Dawn of the Black Axe’: Interviewing David Petersen on the Black Axe’s Origin Story

Out today is the newest Mouse Guard book, 'Mouse Guard: Dawn of the Black Axe'—and…

January 20, 2026