SPARK! Hackathon: Student-Driven Learning in the Real World
Zach Minster & I started the SPARK! Hackathon as a way to share the enthusiasm we have found in students who discover computer science & coding with the thriving tech community in Charlottesville. What we discovered during the planning and running of the event the first time is that students are eager for opportunities to collaborate with others and work on meaningful projects while the tech community is eager to hear their ideas and help them create.
What we’ve learned now that we’ve run the 2nd annual SPARK! Hackathon, is that this is an experience worth repeating and sharing. Toward that end, we were very fortunate to have Mozilla partner with us this year. They helped us ground our focus in the principles of openness, accessibility, diversity and community. They also brought some awesome mentors along from Austin, Chicago, Toronto, Los Angeles and Waynesboro to give us support while taking away ideas. Here are some of the insights that they have shared about their SPARK! Hackathon experience:
Hackathons: always be learning (Link Clark, Coding4TX)
Lessons learned at SPARK 2017 (Chad Sansing, Mozilla)
Performing the Net… of Things (Robert Friedman, Mozilla Hive Austin)
We do a lot of planning and prep work to make the hackathon happen, but once it starts, we do everything in our power to hand it over to the participants. Our first year, that was a very scary prospect. What if the kids didn’t get it or they bailed or chaos ensued? None of that happened, well maybe a little chaos, but that’s what it’s like to give up control. That’s why I believe that this hackathon is student-driven learning at it’s best. We set up a framework with workshops for learning new skills and problem statements to solve, but its the students who make the decisions about what to learn, how to solve the problem and who to work with. To expand student-ownership of the event this year, we recruited some past participants to work with workshop leaders, provide mentoring to participants and to staff the new SPARK Central (an area where participants could ask questions and find/request materials), plus they also picked out the snacks:)
The SPARK! Hackathon experience reminds me that our future relies on the youth of today wielding the power of tech for good. As Mozilla hackathon mentor Link Clark reflected, experiences like these "give us the chance to lay the foundation for students to build a more just and inclusive society while generating awesome ideas and writing code." There’s really no better way to spend the weekend!
We would love to see more events like this and are thinking of starting some fringe events throughout the year that can reach even more students in our region. If you would like to start a hackathon experience for the youth in your community, we’ve shared some resources and we’d love to hear from you:
Problem Statement Guidelines
Workshop Guidelines
Mentor Guidelines
Consent & Release Form
Sample Schedule
Planning Guide
more resources






