I have been tossing this idea around in my head after spending some time with sites like boot.dev and KodeKloud. I am looking for ways to more interactively train students. I have had so much feedback from the younger folks that they don't want to spend time watching videos. You know, in 2007, I was frothing at the mouth for video tutorial training because I am personally a visual learner. I also spend a lot of time doing labs and things on my own. When I was studying to the Network+ (which I completely bombed at the time). Getting my hands on a CCNA rack from eBay was like the most delicious BBQ Beef Ribs dropping in my lap with some of the best potato salad from Momma.
Now in this highly interactive and lazy, give it all to me now generation of techs who want everything served to them on a platter. I'm struggling to see how to make things more interactive. Honestly, I have really enjoyed platforms like KodeKloud and LabEx where you have actual hands-on keyboard with actual labs (but the guidance still sucks).
Has anyone thought about or built an OpenClaw styled solution to actively interact with students during learning? I have been thinking about maybe theory first and then video explanation and then a hands-on interactive lab using an AI Agent. I would really like the thoughts from others.
Now in this highly interactive and lazy, give it all to me now generation of techs who want everything served to them on a platter. I'm struggling to see how to make things more interactive. Honestly, I have really enjoyed platforms like KodeKloud and LabEx where you have actual hands-on keyboard with actual labs (but the guidance still sucks).
Has anyone thought about or built an OpenClaw styled solution to actively interact with students during learning? I have been thinking about maybe theory first and then video explanation and then a hands-on interactive lab using an AI Agent. I would really like the thoughts from others.