Our Coding Community and Student Life at Code Minors
I believe coding is better when learned together. From offline meetups in Goregaon to our global online batches, we make learning a shared adventure.
A happy group of my students gathered together during one of our offline meetups. Building a sense of community and friendship is just as important as learning to code.
My students enjoying some fun and games during a Christmas party. These informal gatherings are a great way for everyone to connect and build friendships outside of our regular coding classes.
A simple graphic that captures my core philosophy: Happy Students, Happy Parents. This is the ultimate goal of every class and program I offer at Code Minors.
The title card for a series of testimonials from our happy students and parents. Their positive feedback is the driving force behind everything I do.
About Our Community: Mentors & Students
My favorite moments are not always behind a screen. We frequently host offline meetups at our Goregaon studio where students step away from laptops to solve logic puzzles together. It builds the kind of real-world collaboration that makes actual coding projects so much stronger.
Coding is often viewed as a solitary activity, but I have found that students learn significantly better when they have peers to bounce ideas off. Whether it is a collaborative game design session or a group debugging marathon, the social aspect of coding is what keeps students engaged over the long term.
In my Mumbai classes and global online cohorts, I prioritize small group sizes. This ensures every student can share their screen, explain their logic, and receive feedback from both me and their fellow students. It is not just about writing syntax. It is about learning to communicate technical ideas, a skill that is just as vital as understanding Python or Scratch.
When we meet offline, we prioritize activities away from the keyboard. We play games that teach algorithmic thinking without a single line of code. It breaks the monotony, helps with team building, and allows students to bond over shared interests outside of the curriculum. For parents, this means your child is not just sitting in front of a computer for an hour. They are part of a network of curious young minds who are excited to create, share, and support each other's tech journeys.
Code Minors
I am Sakshi, and I started Code Minors because I wanted coding to be as fun and collaborative as playtime. I do not just teach syntax. I guide students through building real things while fostering a community where they feel supported enough to experiment and make mistakes.
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