Albuquerque Journal

Deep Dive boot camp still churning out coders

CNM graduates nearly 300 over 5-year period

- BY KEVIN ROBINSON-AVILA JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

Until recently, 27-year-old single parent Valente Meza struggled on an $18,000-a-year Applebee’s server income.

But last summer, he joined the Downtown software firm Real Time Solutions as a web designer and developer earning $30,000 annually after graduating from Central New Mexico Community College’s Deep Dive Coding boot camp. CNM paid his entire $6,500 tab for the 10-week course through financial assistance and scholarshi­ps supported by grants from the Kellogg Foundation, Workforce Solutions and others.

“I qualified for assistance as a lowincome, single parent from the Internatio­nal District,” Meza said. “I started here six months after graduating, and I’ve gotten two raises since then. I’m looking now at going back to CNM for an associate’s degree in computer science.”

Meza is one of nearly 300 graduates from the CNM boot camp, which celebrated its fifth-year anniversar­y Wednesday night. At the event, the latest cohort of graduates presented their “capstone” projects and networked with potential employers as part of the program’s Demo Day.

Capstone achievemen­ts included new websites and apps that students built, such as one to explore local hiking trails and another to connect local breweries with potential patrons by matching beer preference­s.

It’s the 20th cohort to graduate from Deep Dive, which serial entreprene­ur John Mierzwa launched in 2013. CNM Ingenuity, a nonprofit that manages all of the college’s commercial activities, acquired it in 2014 for incorporat­ion into CNM’s STEMulous Center Downtown.

To date, more than 90 percent of students have either found jobs or launched their own businesses within six months of graduating.

Graduates’ average starting salary

in the Albuquerqu­e area is $47,000, said CNM Ingenuity Executive Director Kyle Lee.

“Deep Dive grads have started 24 new companies,” Lee said. “And the graduating population is extremely diverse in age, gender, race and income status.”

About half of all students get some type of assistance to cover costs, said senior program manager Andrea Cisneros. Facebook recently offered to pay for 32 scholarshi­ps.

The program provides an alternativ­e path to high-paying careers for many people who would otherwise struggle to earn a computer science degree, said Mierzwa, who helped launch a for-profit software business with CNM Ingenuity last year that now employs three Deep Dive graduates.

“We’ve proven that there are other ways of learning complex topics like computer science than pursuing a four or five-year degree program, which many people can’t do,” Mierzwa said.

CNM has also expanded its bootcamps beyond web design and developmen­t to include a program for mobile web apps using Microsoft technology, and training in Java, Android and Salesforce programmin­g. In August, it will launch another bootcamp for digital media design and production.

 ?? COURTESY OF CRAIG FRITZ ?? Deep Dive Coding boot camp students Manuel Escobar III, left, G. Cordovan and Yvette Johnson-Rodgers present an app called Food Truck Found.
COURTESY OF CRAIG FRITZ Deep Dive Coding boot camp students Manuel Escobar III, left, G. Cordovan and Yvette Johnson-Rodgers present an app called Food Truck Found.

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