If I taught full stack RoR dev in SF for $30/2 hours would you come?

5 points by alexgrande ↗ HN

15 comments

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No, but I would pay you to create a RoR tutorial The tutorial would be viewed by thousands and would support open source Contact me Ric at RubyRails dot com Edit: This is part of my OpenDomain project - we have been supporting open source for 14 years
I don't live in SF or need that sort of instruction, but that strikes me as a bargain rate - even for group instruction.
Agreed - it sounds a lot less than you would get teaching web / programming at your local community college.

I suggest you think of things this way - can you find 3-5 (there are three below, so good marketing) people who would want to take a tutored course of say two weeks. Then you need to find a community college or similar where you can rent a room and Ethernet. The small group learning is always a better bet.

This is a pretty good idea though.

What's the target audience, are you going to filter by, say, DBAs, QA engineers and those conversant in django/java/PHP who're crossing over vs. people getting started in dev?
Yes
Sounds good! I will look into starting something. I'm at Runway shared workspace in SF, and I can use the conference space for free. Small groups and higher rates sounds like the plan.
Thirty dollars? That's much too low. Rates for training typically build in premiums for the time it takes to build courseware and for the fact that course delivery is very demanding. A $5-10k day (for the trainer) is not at all outside the norm for in-person training. There are plenty of open-enrollment classes that are in the $1-3k/attendee range.

If you're giving the class just to figure out how your courseware works, or to dip your toes in the water --- I do both somewhat regularly (as in, a few times in the last 5 years), just do free. $30 isn't even enough to work well as earnest money.

It depends on several factors. How good is the tutor is and how long tutor has experience in RoR programming. If somebody is starting out to develop a customer base then this is perhaps a good start. I agree the price is low but If he completely new(I mean having less recognition) in this area is planning to take a dozen or two students per session then the price is ok.

If it is targeted at intermediate level, I would certainly be glad to take it.

This is interesting. I like teaching and have thought about doing something similar for iOS development in/around NYC as a means of supplemental income but I haven't quite worked out how to go about it yet.

I'd be really interested in hearing how this goes for you!

This is comparable to the hourly rate for lessons I took for fun or otherwise for personal benefit. Swing dance lessons, improv comedy, etc.

I'm not seeking to learn RoR, but your rate strikes me as extremely reasonable. tptacek suggests that it's too low; I'll just say that if I wanted to invest 2 hours in this, I'd certainly also be willing to invest $30.

I would even consider flying in from EU.