When companies inundate the public with ads claiming to turn their kids into the next Steve Jobs and the next Sundar Pichai, it’s expected that some people would want to check them up on their claims. And if a viral video is to be believed, WhiteHat Jr hasn’t exactly come out with flying colours.
A video, which shows a WhiteHat Jr instructor failing to answer basic coding questions, has gone viral on social media. In the video, the parent of a student asks their WhiteHat Jr instructor to explain the difference between Java and Javascript.
“We use JavaScript to develop games,” the instructor hesitantly says. “Java is a high programming level language,” she continues.
The parent then asks the instructor to explain what a “high-programming level language is” — Java is a high-level programming language — but the instructor then admits that she doesn’t know what it means. The instructor also appears to have not heard of popular code repository GitHub.
We wrote to WhiteHat Jr for a comment on the video, but haven’t received a specific response.
WhiteHat Jr has run an extremely aggressive advertising campaign in recent weeks. Some of its ads show young kids, trained through its coding classes, get salaries of Rs. 15 crore per year at Google. Other ads tell parents that after attending their coding classes, their kids will become the next Steve Jobs and Mark Zuckerberg. Yet another ad shows a group of people fighting outside a couple’s house. It later turns out that they are investors who are fighting to be able to invest in the app their kid has developed. WhiteHat Jr’s marketing campaign was so egregious that five of its ads were taken down last week after complaints to the Advertising Standards Council of India.
Somewhat surprisingly, WhiteHat Jr doesn’t require people applying to become its instructors to have any prior coding knowledge. The instructors are put through a training module, and can then go ahead and teach coding to young children. WhiteHat Jr’s website clearly says that its instructors aren’t required to have any prior teaching experience. “No resume required,” its website tells prospective instructors, adding that “no previous experience in teaching is required.”