<div>Noisebridge has a huge variety of classes sessions workshops and class styles. It used to be a place where a Mandarin class would happen after an consensus filled meeting or a jam packed basic soldering workshop. A huge variety of classes and instructors exist there with successive instructors teaching the same subjects in wildly different styles. I've seen college professors, grad students, and post doctoral researchers come in and try out sessions in new subjects there. But as you suggest, there are plenty of hackers teaching at Noisebridge who are not formally teachers, but are learning alongside others.</div>
<div><br></div><div>Although Noisebridge's overall class lineup is constantly in flux, I've spent years helping to teach new faces every Monday how to solder or work with electronics. I've also spent time cultivating the idea that Hackers at Noisebridge should be prepared to teach the subject they are looking to take. I like to see folks who are completely new to Noisebridge be encouraged to start the class they come looking for. Because of this, they often are unprepared, relative to a professional educator. But when folks come looking for extinct workshops, classes, or study groups that are still reported as active on the wiki, and find out they are free to or actually encouraged to restart or reboot a workshop in the way they see fit, we sometimes create educators or instruction just as good or better than that available at formal institutions.</div>
<div><br></div><div><div>In the current lineup of classes at Noisebridge, folks can pick up basics in electronics and uC's, front end web development and javascript, linux system admin and unity game development. Even the Tuesday meetings are instructional as live primers on consensus based decision making processes [thanks for the inspiration, we should create handouts describing our peculiar Noisebridge brand of consensus making!]. </div>
<div>I've seen these same classes change curriculum so much over the year, changing texts and listing coursework, going free form or going project based. </div><div><br></div><div>Over the past 4 years of teaching soldering and electronics, I've developed undocumented instructional sketches on heat transfer, pn junctions, design tradeoffs using wiring methods (direct, multiplex, and charliplex) as examples, and more. The documentation is getting progressively more formal through my professional connection with Bay Area RepRap ( <a href="https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups#!forum/bay-area-reprap">https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups#!forum/bay-area-reprap</a> ) and Type A Machines ( <a href="http://typeamachines.com/">http://typeamachines.com/</a> ) Recently I've put a lot more time into preparing to teach for classes, and it shows. I've taken sessions to Workshop Weekend in Oakland ( <a href="http://workshopweekend.net/">http://workshopweekend.net/</a> ) that started out as rough unprepared workshops at Noisebridge.</div>
</div><div><br></div><div>A note about the facility at Noisebridge: </div><div>There is a strong disincentive to charge for classes at Noisebridge. There are no actual rules about this that I know of, but lots of folk respect this running policy, even if they disagree with it. However, Noisebridge is a great place for instructors to use precisely *because* it's free. I don't understand why instructors aren't clamoring to use a place that is essentially free of any use charges or rental charges. But it looks like we don't get too much ongoing traffic from this angle. Rent in San Francisco is expensive, and Noisebridge provides a refuge for experiments in education lead by hackers. There are plenty of other places people can go to purchase quality instruction in the SF Bay Area. Noisebridge is a place where instructors can cheaply test out or workshop new ideas about education, with willing guinea pigs hungry for knowledge. </div>
<div><br></div><div><br></div><div>-R Miloh Alexander</div><div><br></div><div>p.s. Please support Noisebridge and Archive.org by visiting the Mission Bargain Hacker Electronics Warehouse: <a href="http://goo.gl/AgWur">http://goo.gl/AgWur</a> </div>
<div>We currently have a very affordable & excellent USB 3.0 hard drive enclosures available at <a href="http://goo.gl/AgWur">http://goo.gl/AgWur</a> </div>