Red Squirrel Reflections
Dave Hoover explores the psychology of software development

Dave Hoover
dave.hoover@gmail.com

Categories
All [Atom]
Craftsmanship [Atom]
Dynamic [Atom]
Intersection [Atom]
Learning [Atom]
Links [Atom]
Polyglot [Atom]
Projects [Atom]
XP [Atom]
Old Blog

Obtivian Blogs

Andy Maleh
Colin Harris
Fred Polgardy
Jake Scruggs
Kevin Taylor
Leah Welty-Rieger
Ryan Platte
Todd Webb
Tyler Jennings

Archives

October 2008 (3)
September 2008 (1)
June 2008 (4)
April 2008 (3)
March 2008 (1)
February 2008 (1)
August 2007 (1)
July 2007 (1)
June 2007 (1)
May 2007 (4)
April 2007 (3)
March 2007 (5)
February 2007 (6)
January 2007 (6)
December 2006 (10)
November 2006 (5)
October 2006 (8)
September 2006 (8)
August 2006 (5)
July 2006 (12)
June 2006 (7)
May 2006 (5)
April 2006 (5)
March 2006 (4)
February 2006 (2)
January 2006 (5)
December 2005 (5)
November 2005 (3)
October 2005 (3)
September 2005 (6)
August 2005 (4)
July 2005 (7)
June 2005 (14)
May 2005 (6)
April 2005 (8)
March 2005 (9)
February 2005 (11)
January 2005 (16)
Old Archives

 

Fri, 10 Nov 2006

Speaking at erubycon

I'll be heading to sunny Columbus in February to speak at erubycon, a conference focused on Ruby in the Enterprise put on by the artisans at EdgeCase. I'm honored to share the same web page with the other erubycon speakers: Bruce, Stuart, Justin, and Neal.

[/links] permanent link

Reflections on Leading Obtiva's second Rails/TDD Course

Today was the last day of the second run of the Ruby on Rails TDD Boot Camp. It was an excellent week spent with a comfortably-sized group of strong developers from diverse backgrounds ... some with many years of web development experience, some with none, some with Ruby expertise, some with none. One difference from our first course was that, at least from my perspective, this group gelled. I attribute this difference mostly to my nervousness, and subsequent hurried delivery, in our first course. The second time around I was able to pace things better which had a calming effect on me, and I predict this will continue to improve.

My most noteworthy lesson from this course should serve as a warning for anyone considering taking this course in the future:

  • We are teaching people Ruby and Rails and Ajax in the context of Test-Driven Development
  • We build a Rails project from scratch via TDD
  • The first two days are spent on introductory Ruby and Rails material
The diversity of people coming to us for training means that we won't be able to work at the right level for everyone in the room, but after seeing some experienced Rails developers in my last two classes somewhat frustrated by the introductory material, I wanted to provide a warning for the future. When in doubt, read the course description.

[/training] permanent link


powered by blosxom