Build the Future of Gaming Education

Join our mission to educate the next generation of game developers through innovative programming courses and hands-on learning experiences.

Education Department

Game Development Instructor

We're looking for someone passionate about teaching JavaScript and HTML5 game development. You'll design curriculum for our September 2025 cohort and guide students through hands-on casino game projects. Experience with Canvas API and game engines preferred.

Technology Team

Learning Platform Developer

Help us build interactive coding environments where students learn by doing. You'll work with React, Node.js, and educational APIs to create engaging learning experiences. Perfect for developers who want their code to educate others.

Curriculum Design

Educational Content Designer

Create engaging course materials that make complex programming concepts accessible. You'll develop video tutorials, coding exercises, and project guides for our winter 2026 intensive programs. Background in instructional design valued.

Student Success

Learning Support Coordinator

Be the bridge between struggling students and successful outcomes. You'll provide one-on-one coding help, organize study groups, and track student progress through our programs. Teaching experience helps, but patience matters more.

Meet Our Education Team

Kiran Bethworth teaching game development concepts

Kiran Bethworth

Senior Game Programming Instructor

Former indie game developer who switched to education after realizing he loved explaining code more than writing it. Kiran specializes in making JavaScript game mechanics understandable for beginners.

Leila Panchenko working on curriculum development

Leila Panchenko

Curriculum Development Lead

Designs our hands-on learning paths that actually stick. Leila believes the best way to learn game development is by building something playable from day one — even if it's just a simple card game.

Amara Holstrom mentoring students during coding session

Amara Holstrom

Student Mentorship Director

The person students email at midnight when their code won't work. Amara has an uncanny ability to spot logic errors and knows exactly when to give hints versus letting students figure things out themselves.

How We Work

Education isn't a factory line here. We believe in small classes, personalized feedback, and giving students real projects they'll actually want to show off. Our instructors aren't just experts — they're people who genuinely get excited about that moment when a concept finally clicks for someone.

Most of us came from the gaming industry or software development backgrounds. We understand the practical skills students need because we've been in their shoes. And yes, we still write code ourselves — it's hard to teach something you don't actively practice.

Interactive coding session with students learning game development

Why You'll Like Working Here

Creative Freedom

Design your own teaching approach. If you have better ideas for explaining loops or object-oriented programming, we want to hear them. Our best courses came from instructors experimenting with new methods.

Learning Budget

Stay current with new technologies and teaching methods. We cover conference tickets, online courses, and books. Hard to teach cutting-edge skills if you're not learning them yourself.

Flexible Schedule

Some people teach better in the morning, others come alive during evening sessions. We'll work around your natural rhythm as long as students get the attention they deserve.

Remote Options

Certain roles work great remotely, especially curriculum development and online instruction. We've learned that good teaching transcends physical location when done thoughtfully.

Real Impact

Watch students go from confused beginners to confident developers. There's something uniquely satisfying about seeing someone you taught land their first programming job or launch their own game project.

Small Team Culture

Everyone knows each other here. We make decisions quickly, share ideas openly, and actually listen when someone suggests improvements. No bureaucratic layers between good ideas and implementation.

Application Process

Collaborative planning session for upcoming autumn 2025 courses
1

Submit Application

Send us your resume and a brief note about why you want to teach game development. Skip the formal cover letter — just tell us your story.

2

Teaching Demo

Show us how you'd explain a programming concept to beginners. Pick any topic you're passionate about — we want to see your natural teaching style.

3

Team Conversation

Chat with team members you'd work closely with. This isn't an interrogation — we're all trying to figure out if we'd enjoy collaborating together.

4

Decision

We'll let you know within a week. If it's a yes, we'll discuss start dates and how to get you ready for our autumn 2025 programs launching in September.

Ready to help shape the next generation of game developers? We'd love to hear from you.