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💖 About CodeDay Labs
CodeDay Labs is the 100% online tech internship for anyone.
Tens of thousands of talented CS students attend affordable local colleges rely on internships to gain real-world knowledge and demonstrate the skills they need to get a job. But most companies focus their hiring on brand-name schools.
We help these students get real-world opportunities by pairing them with an industry mentor to work on a real-world, open-source Computer Science project.
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About the Role
Mentors are the lifeblood of CodeDay Labs, and mentor managers help us recruit, onboard, train, and provide support to the mentors who oversee student projects. You'll support a team of mentors (the number of which we'll agree on in advance). There's a lot of flexibility in the schedule.
Requirements
- Good organizational skills (or otherwise happy to edit things in a spreadsheet).
- Comfortable taking on the phone and writing emails.
- At least hand-wavey-level knowledge of how teams develop software, and some modern tooling (consuming/building APIs, what goes into front-end/mobile/back-end development, etc).
You don't need to know how to do these things, but you need to be able to talk about them enough to help a mentor come up with a good project proposal.
- College students or responsible high school students are probably a good fit.
What You'll Do
Before CodeDay Labs Starts:
- Reach out to engineering leadership at a few tech companies, and present information about CodeDay Labs and why their employees should volunteer.
- Onboard mentors, which means taking 1-2 phone calls, ~15min each, at your own schedule, to make sure they understand the program, answer their questions, and finalize a project proposal which meets the needs of students. We'll provide you info on all this.
- Work with the Program Managers and other Mentor Managers to design this year's mentor training, and host a mentor training workshop.
During CodeDay Labs
- Be an escalation path for any questions or problems that come up, like if a student isn't responding, or the mentor is spending too much time helping students and they're not learning on their own. (We'll provide you some guidance but every situation is unique.)
- Check in with any mentors (text/email) you haven't heard from after the first week, and at least one other time, to see if any issues have arisen.
- Review weekly performance feedback for your teams, and decide whether/how we need to address any issues with students on those teams. (Or if we should provide guidance to the mentor.)
- Follow up with any mentors who skipped meetings or are not holding 1-1s with their team members.
Compensation
You'll be paid as a contractor, $500 for each 10 mentors you work with. (We expect you'll spend between 1-2 hours with each mentor in total, so that works out to about $25-50 per hour.)
You're also welcome to do this as a volunteer job, if you'd like to help us get more students into the program. If you volunteer we won't assign you more than 10 students.