What type of web application is the most useful across all audiences, and how can those audiences be reached?
Friday, January 8, 2016
Blog 13: 10 Hour Mentorship Check-In
1. Where are you doing your mentorship?
- Most of my mentorship is done at our favorite coffee shop, however because it is digital work, we also meet digitally and I'm not sure if I'm allowed to count those hours.
2. Who is your contact? What makes this person an expert?
- My contact is my orriginal mentor, Brian. Brian is an expert because it is his job to be clever and find solutions in the programs he writes and that are given to him. Speaking to him feels like speaking to a genius and when you hear his spoken resume on recent projects it feels like excellence. His job is a county job and to me those qualify as the most legit instead of a mom and pop's shop that can all be hearsay.
3. How many hours have you done during the school year? (Summer Mentorship Hours and Mentorship Hours should be reflected separately in your Senior Project Hours log located on the right hand side of your blog).
- I've done 11 hours during the year, but there have been a lot that weren't in person and I'm not sure if I'm allowed to count those.
4. Succinctly summarize what you did, how well you and your mentor worked together, and how you plan to complete the remaining hours.
- Because what we do is a foreign language to me, and a lot of revisiting for my mentor its easier than anything to fill up hundreds of hours of mentorship. My mentor and I make mini applications as lessons for one specific aspect of programming. Every time we meet the chemistry is amazing and we are comfortable with talking for hours, Brian is a very easy person to talk to which helps me because I am not confident in my ability. He teaches me language, the long way for a task, the short way for a task, the task used in a small scale, and the task used in a big scale, in that specific order when we meet.
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