Announcing the MLH Fellowship, powered by GitHub
Now more than ever, students need opportunities to sustain their growth, using real tools, and an experienced understanding of how to work remotely and globally. With this new program, we’re helping to support the next generation of developers and the open source projects that companies use every day.
Companies everywhere find themselves quickly changing how they work. With the culture shift that comes along with remote work, it’s fair to say that collaboration is already starting to be different.
At GitHub Education, our emphasis has always been to help the next generation of developers make their best work. Now, more than ever, students need opportunities to sustain their growth. Together with our partners Major League Hacking (MLH), we’re solving this problem with a new program—the MLH Fellowship, Powered by GitHub. This remote program matches up “pods” of 8-10 students with open source projects and mentors over a period of 12 weeks. Students receive a stipend for the program through GitHub Sponsors, allowing us to serve 32 regions and counting.
We’re calling on other tech companies to come together and fuel this ecosystem. To kick off the program, GitHub Education plans to support 100 MLH Fellows in the inaugural class of summer 2020. Other partners joining this coalition include Facebook, DEV, and the Royal Bank of Canada.
Our vision: Workforce innovation to meet student demand
Enterprises want to stay competitive with recent graduates, and internship programs often provide that edge. Internships also serve as a credential: For future hiring managers, an internship with a top tech company is a good indication of a quality candidate.
But for students, many, many more of them apply for those coveted roles than there are positions to fill. For most students, a summer in Silicon Valley is often out of the question for those aspiring developers, maintainers, and engineering managers. In partnering with MLH, we’re looking to welcome a new global workforce that is trained in real-world workflows and collaboration.
CEO of MLH, Mike Swift, points to the program’s design around remote work and public projects:
Enabling students to spend their summer contributing to the software that runs the world is a unique opportunity for them. They’ll work on meaningful projects with their peers under the guidance of some of the world’s most talented engineers. The remote nature of this program will democratize access to internships for countless students worldwide.
The opportunity: Shape the future of work
In this moment, companies have the opportunity to affect how we learn, collaborate, and share for decades to come. We’ll see the results of these particular efforts in as little as 12 months when this year’s group of interns graduate.
Let’s keep education moving forward. Students, we got you.
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