It used to be that a traditional college degree was the only route to a high-paying professional job. The tech industry is changing that, and New Haven-area students have a chance to be part of the disruption.
At Holberton, an international computer science and software development school with a campus at the District entrepreneurship space in Fair Haven, students from recent high school grads to second-careerists can apply for a two-year training program that leads to a diploma and the same kinds of jobs college grads line up for, says Al Bhatt, Holbertonโs acting director at District. The average starting salary for the schoolโs first New Haven graduates is about $72,000, Bhatt reports. A hiring partner from โa large universityโ is now working to get around an employment requirement for a bachelorโs degree in order to hire Holberton alums, Bhatt says. โYou see that out west like crazy. Weโre starting to see it more and more in stodgy and conservative places like Connecticut as well.โ
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Holbertonโs space at Districtโonce a CTtransit bus terminalโresembles an open-concept Silicon Valley tech office. Soft-sculpted geometric benches face a presentation stage up front. Several dozen work stations, each with its own desktop computer, are clustered in other areas for collaborative work. In โThe Cube,โ behind a fringed red curtain, students can unplug, relax and regroupโat least, in normal times. At the edges of the cavernous room are a few glass-walled offices housing the small staff with spaceโagain, in normal timesโfor students to meet in small study groups. Computers are available for students who donโt have their own.
School days at Holberton are structured like work days around projects and deadlines, Bhatt says. โAs much as possible,
Holbertonโs curriculum, delivered in five trimesters, is โjust a sequencing of projects that are constantly refreshed that builds literacy in all of the major programming languages and applications,โ Bhatt says. Students travel through the program in cohorts, learning from one full-time senior software engineer, Atta Kakra โKayโ Detome, who lectures โstrategicallyโ on topics the whole group needs to learn. Otherwise, instruction is tailored to whatever individual students need, supported by personal tutoring, peer learning, and good old trial and error. After the first nine months, students move into specialized tracks, where they proceed virtually along with others at US campuses in San Francisco, Tulsa and San Juan, Puerto Rico, and global sites in Colombia, France and Tunisia. About 90 students make up the first five cohorts in New Haven, whose Holberton franchise opened in January of 2019.
Second-year student Mitch Moscovics of North Haven found Holberton through a family friend who was mentoring students there. Moscovics was between jobs, โand I figured I might as well go back to school,โ he says. โIโve always been interested in computers and wanted to learn more about it.โ Now specializing in augmented and virtual reality with hopes of eventually landing a job in the medical field, Moscovics adds that Holberton isnโt for everyone. If theyโre โabsolutely gung-ho on learning something with computer science, itโs definitely a look-into; however, it is a very intense program,โ he says. For that reason, students are encouraged to make Holberton their full-time pursuit, rather than trying to hold down a job.
In part to make that more workable, Holberton requires no upfront financial investment from students. They donโt have to pay anything for the two-year program until theyโve graduated and started earning a paycheck of at least $40,000. Then, for 42 months, theyโll pay back 17% of their salary, interest-free, to a maximum of $85,000.
In New Haven, Holberton operates as part of District Arts and Education (DAE), the nonprofit, education-based arm of District, which offers public programs relevant to the new โCreativity Era.โ DAE also hosts live music on the patio at Bearโs Smokehouse nextdoor or streamed from Holbertonโs indoor stage.
Bhatt, who spent most of his career in New York City running consulting firms and working with major clients like IBM and Facebook, now directs DAE with a focus on the importance of the humanities to business and leadership. Under his guidance, the Holberton program is embedded within Districtโs social mission. He compares it to inserting the โIntel chipโ of Holbertonโs curriculum into the laptop of DAE. Itโs important, Bhatt says, for future software engineers to understand that โtechnology is not value-neutral.โ He gives as an example the fact that Siri and Alexa are both female-gendered assistantsโessentially, old-fashioned secretaries, a stereotype we might not want to bring into the next generation. โAbsent a social awarenessโnot a particular set of values, but just an awarenessโthat technology is not neutral, weโre gonna create stuff that perpetuates things that we may not want to perpetuate,โ he says.
The woman for whom Holberton is named, Frances Elizabeth Holberton, vaulted past some of those worn stereotypes long ago. She was one of six women programmers who created โthe first general-purpose electronic digital computerโ for the US Army during World War II, according to Wikipedia. She later โparticipated in the development of early standards for the COBOL and FORTRAN programming languagesโ along with Yale alumna Grace Murray Hopper, for whom one of the universityโs residential colleges is named.
If thereโs one thing Holberton stands for, itโs the idea that technology is for everyone.
Holberton School at District
470 James St, New Haven (map)
(203) 401-8768 | nhv-admissions@holbertonschool.com
www.holbertonschool.com/campus_life/new_haven
Written and photographed by Kathy Leonard Czepiel.