zackforbing / community_content

A repository that contains the instructions and schedule of students' lightning talks.

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Overview

Each six-week session, all students in module 2 will prepare a lightning talk based on the topics below. All students in modules 3 and 4 will work in groups to prepare a lightning talk about their job shadowing experience. Preparation and completion of any of these options will take approximately 2-4 hours.

Schedule

  • Module 2 students - Friday, July 15 (Week 3) at 1:15 PM
  • Module 3 and 4 students - Friday, July 22 (Week 4) at 1:15 PM

Community Content How-To

Choose a topic (ie - Animation with Snap.js). Topics cannot be repeated during the module and are first come, first serve. During the week of your lightning talk, the schedule is as follows:

  • Monday: Submit your topic to the markdown file before 4pm.
  • Tuesday: Add your outline as a gist before 4pm.
  • Wednesday: Draft slides and/or content. If you'd like feedback, send your draft to Casey or Beth.
  • Thursday: Rehearsal after wrap up. Your slides and/or content should be prepared in advance as laptops will be closed during rehearsal. Attendance is mandatory.
  • Friday: Present your 5-minute talk or student-led session for your Turing peers.

Topics & Themes

All topics must be approved

Module 2 students: It is preferred that your topic fit into one of the themes below. That said, feel free to pitch a topic related to your experience prior to Turing. Keep in mind that the topic should be of interest to a school of software developers and that the topic must be approved before moving forward.

  • Computer Hardware
  • Computer Science
  • Design / User Experience
  • DevOps
  • Front End Development
  • General Software Methodologies / Techniques
  • Historical or Present-day People in Computer Science
  • JavaScript Architecture / Libraries
  • Programming & Science
  • Programming & the Arts
  • Programming Languages
  • Ruby Architecture / Libraries
  • Software Libraries
  • Software Testing
  • Technology & Law
  • Technology & Society
  • Technology & Ethics
  • Web Technologies

Module 3 and 4 students: Your topic will be your job shadowing experience.

When considering the content of your presentation, take care to promote a welcoming environment for all students regardless of their age, gender, socio-economic background, religious beliefs, or sexual orientation.

Picking a Topic

  • You don't need to be an expert on a topic. You can do the research and become expert enough to deliver a valuable talk.
  • A talk needs to teach something of value to the audience.
  • A talk needs to be at an appropriate level for the audience, not too basic and not too advanced.
  • A talk needs to have a message, not just a subject. "Introduction to RSpec" is boring, "Why You Should Use RSpec" has a message.

Examples of Previous Topics:

  • Using Computer Science to manipulate OKCupid
  • When Pairing Goes Wrong
  • How to Survive the Titanic with Machine Learning
  • The TDD Holy War
  • Is Elegant Ruby Fast?
  • Genetic Algorithms with Ruby Processing
  • Ancient Cryptography

About

A repository that contains the instructions and schedule of students' lightning talks.