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Jim McKelvey

LaunchCode is looking at expanding

By News

LaunchCode founder Jim McKelvey said this morning that he already has office space in Miami and will move there temporarily in June to work on a Miami version of the training and job-placement program. Baltimore, Philadelphia and Denver also are likely destinations for LaunchCode, he said.

McKelvey, speaking at an Innovation St. Louis forum at the Missouri Botanical Garden, said officials of EdX, an education joint venture between Harvard and MIT, encouraged him to expand LaunchCode. In St. Louis, LaunchCode is using a free EdX computer science class to train programmers. The class is offered online, but LaunchCode is offering hands-on sessions to augment the coursework.

LaunchCode, which began last September, has placed 57 programmers in $15-an-hour apprenticeships with St. Louis companies. Twenty-seven of those have been hired for full-time jobs at an average salary of $55 an hour, McKelvey said.

He sees the combination of EdX and LaunchCode as something that could disrupt the model for computer science education. “The program is going to the world with the message that education doesn’t have to put you into debt, and it doesn’t have to take up four years of your life,” McKelvey said.

4 startups that just got $100,000 from Jim McKelvey’s SixThirty

By News

SixThirty, the financial services tech startup accelerator founded by Jim McKelvey in 2013, has selected four startups to makeup its spring 2014 class. Each startup will receive a $100,000 investment in return for an equity stake (between 5 percent and 10 percent).

The companies will move to St. Louis for the four-month program, where they’ll receive mentoring and access to global financial companies like MasterCard and Edward Jones.

Read more at www.bizjournals.com.

My first boss: co-founder of Twitter Jack Dorsey and tech entrepreneur Jim McKelvey

By News

Jack joined one of my companies – we did publishing software for conferences – when he was 15, basically as an intern. He was still at school and worked for us for three summers. His mother owned a coffee shop. This was before you could get Ritalin readily, so we used to use the chocolate-covered espresso beans to stay awake during long hauls. One of my co-workers got talking to her. She mentioned that her son liked working with computers, so we agreed for him to come in for an interview, then forgot about it.

Read more at www.theguardian.com.