Open Source Starts in the Classroom: WordPress Education in Poland

When people ask me what Iโ€™ve been working on lately, the answer usually involves students, professors, and open sourceOpen Source Open Source denotes software for which the original source code is made freely available and may be redistributed and modified. Open Source **must be** delivered via a licensing model, see GPL. contributions. Something has been quietly building in Poland on the WordPress education front, and I think itโ€™s time to share whatโ€™s been happening.

Iโ€™ve been coordinating WordPress Educational Initiatives in the Central and Eastern Europe region for a while now, and Poland has become one of the most exciting places to watch. Hereโ€™s a look at what weโ€™ve built so far.

Universities Joining the WP Credits Program

The WordPress Credits Program connects students with real open source contributions, and Polish universities have been embracing this in a genuine way. Students arenโ€™t just learning WordPress as a tool; theyโ€™re becoming contributors to a project that powers a significant portion of the web. For many of them, itโ€™s the first time they realize that open source is something they can actively participate in, not just consume.

Seeing students submit their first contributions, earn their credit badges, and start to understand how a global open source community actually works has been one of the most rewarding parts of this work. What makes the Polish context interesting is the strong technical culture in Polish higher education, students come in with solid foundations, and the Credits Program gives them a meaningful way to apply that to something real and lasting.

Campus Connect Events

Alongside the Credits Program, weโ€™ve been running WordPress Campus Connect events in Poland. These are hands-on sessions that bring WordPress into the classroom in a direct, practical way, connecting students with the broader community and giving them a taste of what contributor culture looks and feels like.

The events have been a great bridge between academic learning and the open source world. For a lot of students, meeting people from the WordPress community, hearing how others got involved, and realizing theyโ€™re already contributing to something global is the moment things click.

High Schools Stepping In

One of the developments Iโ€™m most excited about is whatโ€™s been happening at the secondary school level. VIII LO, a high school in Krakow, has students actively working on WordPress-related projects. This mirrors a broader direction in the WP Credits Program to explore contributions beyond universities, and itโ€™s been incredible to see younger students take it seriously.

These students arenโ€™t just building websites. Theyโ€™re engaging with real problems, thinking about users, and learning what it means to create something that others will actually use. And some of them will be presenting their work at WordCampWordCamp WordCamps are casual, locally-organized conferences covering everything related to WordPress. They're one of the places where the WordPress community comes together to teach one another what theyโ€™ve learned throughout the year and share the joy. Learn more. Europe 2026 in Krakow, which makes this particularly full-circle: theyโ€™re in the host city, theyโ€™re local students, and theyโ€™ll be sharing their WordPress journey with an international audience.

Whatโ€™s Coming at WCEUWCEU WordCamp Europe. The European flagship WordCamp event. 2026

Speaking of WCEU: as part of the Education programming at WordCamp Europe this year, students from Krakow University of Technology, Krakow University of Economics, and VIII LO will be showcasing the projects theyโ€™ve built during their involvement in WordPress educational initiatives. Having local students present at a flagship WordPress event is a big deal, and itโ€™s a testament to how far this work has come.

Why This Matters

Rita Robles wrote beautifully about what the WP Credits Program means to her in Costa Rica: seeing students go from never having heard of open source to becoming active contributors, building real portfolios, and connecting to a global community. I feel the same way about whatโ€™s happening in Poland.

The thing that keeps me going in those initiatives is the moment when a student stops thinking of themselves as someone who uses technology and starts seeing themselves as someone who builds it. That shift happens across cultures, in Krakow just as much as in Cartago.

Weโ€™re still building. More institutions are in conversation about joining the Credits Program, more Campus Connect events are in the pipeline, and the student showcase at WCEU is going to open some doors. Poland is very much in motion.

If youโ€™re an educator in Poland or elsewhere in CEE and youโ€™re curious about bringing WordPress into your institution, reach out. Thereโ€™s a place for you in this program.


Maciej โ€œMattโ€ Pilarski is a Community WranglerWrangler Someone, usually a person part of event organizing team, who looks after certain things like budget or sponsors. at Automattic, coordinating WordPress Educational Initiatives in Central and Eastern Europe and Asia, part of the WCEU 2026 Local Team in Krakow.

#campus-connect, #education, #wpcredits

Monthly Education Buzz Report โ€“ May 2026

Welcome to the Monthly Education Buzz Report, your go-to source for highlights and updates on the WordPress Campus Connect, WordPress Credits, and WordPress Student Club education initiatives within the WordPress community. This report aims to celebrate, promote, and inform individuals across the WordPress community and beyond about the diverse educational endeavors underway.


WordPress Campus Connect

WordPress Campus Connect (WPCC) closed out May with the programโ€™s strongest numbers yet. The program has now completed 25 events in 2026 and 45 events all time, reaching more than 6,200 total attendees across its lifetime. Six events are currently scheduled, and 31 more are in setup or early planning stages โ€” the largest pipeline the program has seen. If youโ€™re working on an application or just getting started, the #campusconnect channel in the Make WordPress SlackSlack Slack is a Collaborative Group Chat Platform https://slack.com/. The WordPress community has its own Slack Channel at https://make.wordpress.org/chat/ is the right place to connect with the team and get your questions answered.

Completed Events

WPCC National Taitung University, Taiwan (May 24)

WordPress Campus Connect National Taitung University brought the program to Taiwan for the first time, welcoming students to a day of hands-on WordPress learning in Taitung. The event extends WPCCโ€™s reach further across Asia Pacific and adds another new country to the programโ€™s growing global map.

WPCC Masaka, Uganda

The WPCC Masaka multi-session program wrapped up in May after running since mid-April. The program introduced students in the Masaka region to WordPress and open sourceOpen Source Open Source denotes software for which the original source code is made freely available and may be redistributed and modified. Open Source **must be** delivered via a licensing model, see GPL., continuing the strong and sustained presence Campus Connect has built across Uganda, where it has now held events in Jinja, Lira, Kaliro, Masaka, and Kakumiro.

Upcoming and Scheduled Events

The following events are currently scheduled and open for registration or tracking:

With 31 events in planning, the second half of 2026 is shaping up to be the busiest stretch in the programโ€™s history. If youโ€™re an educator or community organizer interested in hosting a Campus Connect event, you can apply here.

Streamlining the Application Pipeline

The WPCC team has been building toward a faster, more consistent experience for applicants. On May 8, Isotta Peira and Rocรญo Valdivia published a detailed post outlining plans to automate the steps in the application process that currently require the most manual effort: vetting, status transitions, organizer emails, and site creation. A vetting agent โ€” already built by @piyopiyofox and being tested by @clk87 โ€” will run hourly, write notes to the tracker, and move applications to a new โ€œNeeds Actionโ€ status so a human reviewer can take it from there.

The application form will also be updated to include a checkbox where applicants confirm the WPCC organizer agreement, removing the need for a separate agreement document. As a helpful clarification for anyone navigating the process: a venue agreement is not required for WPCC events held on campus with a professor present, as participants are typically covered by institutional insurance. The full technical plan is tracked in GitHub issue #1714. If youโ€™ve vetted WPCC applications, or if youโ€™ve been an organizer waiting on approval, feedback is welcome on GitHubGitHub GitHub is a website that offers online implementation of git repositories that can easily be shared, copied and modified by other developers. Public repositories are free to host, private repositories require a paid subscription. GitHub introduced the concept of the โ€˜pull requestโ€™ where code changes done in branches by contributors can be reviewed and discussed before being merged by the repository owner. https://github.com/ or in the comments of the Make post.


WordPress Credits

When One Contribution Travels 6,000 Miles

Hereโ€™s a story that shows what open source can do when it works. Elena Zheng (@zleena), a WordPress Credits student in Spain, translated and adapted the guide for organizing a WordPress photo walk into Spanish, publishing her work to the Spanish WordPress Photos team handbook.

Not long after, the Guadalajara WordPress Community in Mexico โ€” roughly 6,000 miles from Elenaโ€™s home โ€” used that same guide to organize their own photo walk. One studentโ€™s contribution, completed as part of her coursework, found its way to a community on a different continent and helped them run a better event. Elena contributed to the WordPress Photos team, which gains translated resources for global organizers. The Guadalajara community gained a ready-made guide in their language. And the open source ecosystem grew in exactly the way itโ€™s supposed to โ€” outward, and further than anyone expected.

This kind of contribution is exactly what WordPress Credits is designed to make possible: real work, with real downstream value, done by students who are just getting started.

What First-Time MentorsEvent Supporter Event Supporter (formerly Mentor) is someone who has already organised a WordCamp and has time to meet with their assigned mentee every 2 weeks, they talk over where they should be in their timeline, help them to identify their issues, and also identify solutions for their issues. Are Learning

On May 12, Jos Velasco published What Weโ€™re Learning from First-Time WP Credits Mentors: A Story from the Field on Make WordPress Community. The post walks through his experience guiding three students โ€” each with a different pace, a different path, and a different relationship to open source โ€” through their first contributions. Itโ€™s an honest, useful read that any current or prospective mentorEvent Supporter Event Supporter (formerly Mentor) is someone who has already organised a WordCamp and has time to meet with their assigned mentee every 2 weeks, they talk over where they should be in their timeline, help them to identify their issues, and also identify solutions for their issues. will recognize.

One of Josโ€™s takeaways is worth lifting here: students who contribute most meaningfully arenโ€™t the ones who rush to finish โ€” theyโ€™re the ones who find a project that feels genuinely worth doing. He also raises a question worth discussing across teams: what if contributing teams shared a short, timely list of what would actually be most useful right now, so students could choose tasks with clear downstream value? If youโ€™re a team repTeam Rep A Team Rep is a person who represents the Make WordPress team to the rest of the project, make sure issues are raised and addressed as needed, and coordinates cross-team efforts. or an active mentor with thoughts on this, his post has space for that conversation.

Program Updates

Fidรฉlitas University in Costa Rica launched its second cohort of WordPress Credits students on May 11, making it one of the first partner institutions to complete a full program cycle and return for a second round. New students from Fidรฉlitas and other partner institutions are arriving throughout the month, and mentors are actively welcoming them into the relevant Slack channels and contribution areas.

On the mentor side, @marianosarmiento completed the mentor course this month, and @Sumit Singh has been actively guiding students who are contributing to the Core team. @Alvaro Gรณmez proposed an idea now being piloted in the program: connecting students with NGOs for their internship hours, giving students a meaningful contribution pathway while creating real value for civil society organizations. Itโ€™s a natural extension of the programโ€™s ethos, and one worth watching as the pilot develops.

A workshop was also held in May to introduce students to Weglot, one of WordPress Creditsโ€™ tool sponsors, which offers students free access to a full year of the Weglot Business Plan (a โ‚ฌ290 value) for website translation. Recordings of the workshop will be made available on WordPress.TV for students and mentors who want to review the material or catch up at their own pace.


WordPress Student Clubs

May brought two concrete milestones on the student club side. The Esparza Student Club at UCR Sede del Pacรญfico officially formed and held its inaugural event on May 20 in Esparza, Puntarenas, Costa Rica, with 50 students participating. The club adds another organized, student-led presence to the Campus Connect pipeline in Central America, where WordPress education has been building steadily.

The St Philomena College, Puttur student club in India also published its website this month, giving the club a public presence on campus and within the broader WordPress community.

Conversations are ongoing about how to make club websites easier to launch. One proposal gaining traction is a one-page format, with details pre-filled from tracker data to lower the setup burden for student organizers. The goal is a polished starting point that doesnโ€™t require a team to build from scratch. If youโ€™re thinking about starting a student club at your institution, the WordPress Student Club Guide is the right place to begin.


Other Happenings

Education Gets a Spotlight at WordCampWordCamp WordCamps are casual, locally-organized conferences covering everything related to WordPress. They're one of the places where the WordPress community comes together to teach one another what theyโ€™ve learned throughout the year and share the joy. Learn more. Europe 2026

WordCamp Europe 2026 takes place June 4โ€“6 at the ICE Krakรณw Congress Centre in Krakรณw, Poland, and education has emerged as one of the clearest threads running through this yearโ€™s program. Day two of the conference includes a dedicated education track:

All sessions will be live streamed. Tickets are still available if youโ€™re joining in person.

Mary Hubbard on Why Education Matters for WordPress

In May, the WordCamp Europe Insights podcast published episode 10: Why Education Could Shape the Next Era of WordPress. WordPress Executive Director Mary Hubbard joins host Kasia Janoska for a wide-ranging conversation covering WordPress Credits, Campus Connect, mentoring, AI, and the case for bringing WordPress into educational institutions earlier and more broadly. Itโ€™s a good listen ahead of the conference, and an accessible entry point for anyone who wants to understand what these programs are building toward. Find it on YouTube or Spotify.

The WordPress.org/news post previewing WordCamp Europe 2026 also spotlights education as a defining theme this year, noting the full track of sessions on contributor onboarding, university partnerships, and open source learning that make this yearโ€™s program one of the most education-forward in the conferenceโ€™s history.


Get Involved

WordPress Credits WordPress Campus Connect WordPress Student Clubs

See something in the community that should be noted here or in a future newsletter? Comment below!

Stay tuned for next monthโ€™s update!

#education-buzz #campusconnect #wpcredits #studentclubs

My WPCredits Journey: What We’ve Built So Far

When we started WPCredits at Universidad Fidรฉlitas, I knew it was an important project, but I didnโ€™t fully grasp everything it would come to mean. Today, looking back, I realize that in a short time weโ€™ve built something worth talking about. And since this is a journey thatโ€™s still very much open, I want to share it exactly as Iโ€™m living it.

From 158 to 185 students

We launched our first cohort with 158 students. That number already felt big to me, especially thinking about the logistics of supporting that many people well, making sure no one falls through the cracks. Today weโ€™re 185 active students, spread across 6 schedules.

That split across schedules isnโ€™t a minor detail. When you work with large groups, the temptation is to put everyone in the same space and run through the content all at once. We chose the opposite: dividing into six schedules precisely so we could offer close support, answer real questions, and make sure every student feels thereโ€™s someone paying attention to their progress. Contributing to WordPress for the first time can be intimidating, and that support is the difference between someone who stays and someone who drops out.

Five professors who joined as mentorsEvent Supporter Event Supporter (formerly Mentor) is someone who has already organised a WordCamp and has time to meet with their assigned mentee every 2 weeks, they talk over where they should be in their timeline, help them to identify their issues, and also identify solutions for their issues.

If I had to pick the thing Iโ€™m proudest of in this cohort, it isnโ€™t the student numbers: itโ€™s that we brought in 5 professors as mentors.

To me, this is key. Itโ€™s one thing to have motivated students learning to contribute, and quite another to have faculty fully involved in mentoring, guiding them step by step. These professors understand both sides of the coin: the dynamics of the classroom, with its timelines and academic demands, and the dynamics of the WordPress community, which runs on its own logic of contribution, collaboration, and open sourceOpen Source Open Source denotes software for which the original source code is made freely available and may be redistributed and modified. Open Source **must be** delivered via a licensing model, see GPL.. Having someone who can translate between those two worlds makes the student experience far more solid.

Faculty Mentors for the WP Credits Program at Universidad Fidรฉlitas

Why this program is so meaningful to me

Beyond the numbers, what truly moves me about WPCredits is seeing who weโ€™re reaching. We are bringing new generations to WordPress.

Iโ€™m talking about students who, in many cases, had never heard of open source, who didnโ€™t know that behind WordPress thereโ€™s a global community of people contributing their time and work openly. When they discover that they too can contribute in a real wayโ€”that their work gets recorded, that it becomes part of a project powering a huge portion of the webโ€”something shifts in how they see themselves. They stop being mere users of technology and become people who build it. And along the way, they put together an authentic professional portfolio, with verifiable contributions that carry real weight in the job market.

Planting that seed in young people, opening that door for them, is what makes this program so much more than an institutional task for me.

The new step: WPCredits reaches high schools

And because the idea has always been to keep moving forward, weโ€™ve taken a step that has me especially excited: together with @peiraisotta, weโ€™ve launched a WPCredits pilot in high schools.

This pilot is part of the broader WPCredits initiativeโ€”an effort to explore how the program can reach beyond universities and open its doors to secondary education. Working alongside Isotta to bring this vision to life has been a real privilege, and it speaks to the programโ€™s commitment to growing the community from the ground up.

The first school to join is the Liceo HHC Experimental Bilingรผe Josรฉ Figueres Ferrer in Cartago, Costa Rica. There, 13 tenth-grade students will begin this process as part of their Student Community Service requirement. I find this point especially valuable: instead of fulfilling their community service with a one-off, isolated activity, these young people will do it by contributing to an international project, with real and verifiable impact. Their community service becomes a formative, technical experience that connects them to a global community.

Itโ€™s the first time WPCredits reaches secondary education, and to me, it represents opening an entirely new door. These students are younger; theyโ€™re at a different stage, and seeing how they respond to this challenge is going to teach us a great deal.

Because thatโ€™s the other important point: this pilot isnโ€™t a standalone event. Itโ€™s designed as a foundation, a model that can be replicated and improved so that, starting next year, more high schools can join the initiative. Weโ€™re beginning with one, with 13 students, but the programโ€™s sights are set on something much bigger.

Yesterday, during the first session with the group of students at the Josรฉ Figueres Ferrer Experimental Bilingual High School

Moving forward

When I put all of this togetherโ€”the growth of the cohort, the professors who joined as mentors, the new students arriving at WordPress, and now high schools entering the pictureโ€”itโ€™s clear to me that weโ€™re on the right path.

WPCredits, for me, turned out to be much more than a program: itโ€™s a way of building community, of making room for new generations, and of showing that from Costa Rica we can contribute to a global project.

This is only the beginning. And we keep moving forward.

#education, #wpcredits

What We’re Learning from First-Time WP Credits Mentors: A Story from the Field

This post shares the experience of Jos Velasco, a first-time mentorEvent Supporter Event Supporter (formerly Mentor) is someone who has already organised a WordCamp and has time to meet with their assigned mentee every 2 weeks, they talk over where they should be in their timeline, help them to identify their issues, and also identify solutions for their issues. in the WordPress Credits program, and what his cohort revealed about how mentorsEvent Supporter Event Supporter (formerly Mentor) is someone who has already organised a WordCamp and has time to meet with their assigned mentee every 2 weeks, they talk over where they should be in their timeline, help them to identify their issues, and also identify solutions for their issues. and students navigate their first open-source contribution together. As the program grows, stories like this help us refine how we onboard, scope projects, and connect students to the wider community.

The WordPress Credits program pairs students with community contributors who guide them through their first open-source contribution. The framework is simple on paper: a mentor, a student, an immediate contribution opportunity, and a finish line. In practice, every cohort surfaces something new about what makes the program work.

This is a look at one mentorโ€™s first cohort: three students, three different paths, and a few takeaways that other current and future mentors will recognize.

The cohort

Jos took on three mentees, all new to open-source contribution. Before choosing a contribution path, students complete an onboarding phase on Learn WordPress, with curated lessons, Playground sandboxes, and quizzes.

That onboarding phase is solid, but it can take longer than expected, both for students and for mentors. Thereโ€™s a lot of material, and the schedule needs to flex around real lives. The trickiest part isnโ€™t the curriculum: itโ€™s the balance every mentor has to strike between enabling studentsโ€™ potential and not doing the work for them. Open sourceOpen Source Open Source denotes software for which the original source code is made freely available and may be redistributed and modified. Open Source **must be** delivered via a licensing model, see GPL. isnโ€™t an obligation. Part of mentoring is helping students want to contribute, by showing them why it matters and what they get out of it, rather than pushing them through a checklist.

Each of the three students landed in a different place.

Gabi: Photos as a creative outlet

Gabi Hawkins works as an IT technician moving toward web development. She chose Photos, which wasnโ€™t directly tied to her career path but suited who she is: a visual person drawn to front-end work. Her submissions reflect that, a Japanese pagoda lit at night, jellyfish in deep blue water, koi beside a rock-lined path. Not test shots. Photos from someone with an eye.

A small, instructive snag: Gabi met her project requirements on time, but her certificate was delayed because she filled out the feedback form using a different email than the one on her WP Credits profile. The course system didnโ€™t detect her completion. A small reminder for mentors and students alike to double-check that emails match across systems, especially when graduation is on the line.

CC0ย licensedย photoย byย Gabriella Hawkinsย from theย WordPress Photo Directory.

Tโ€™Kai: Showing up async, on her own schedule

Tโ€™Kai Monet is a full-time student and a full-time mom of a newborn. Her schedule was, predictably, unpredictable. She originally chose Themes and switched to Photos when time was tight, a smart pivot. What stood out wasnโ€™t her output, though, but how she participated.

She attended a WordPress meetupMeetup Meetup groups are locally-organized groups that get together for face-to-face events on a regular basis (commonly once a month). Learn more about Meetups in our Meetup Organizer Handbook. at 2:30 a.m., not because she couldnโ€™t sleep, but because she was already up with the baby and decided to make the most of it. She wrote about it as if it were the most reasonable thing in the world. And in a global, async community, it kind of is.

This is one of the most important things any new contributor can internalize: the conversation will happen across time zones, and showing up in the rhythm that works for you is showing up.

CC0ย licensedย photoย byย Tโ€™Kai Monetย from theย WordPress Photo Directory.

Noah: Finding a meaningful path, not just a completable one

Noah Mobes spent real time early on looking for a path that felt meaningful, rather than the easiest one to finish. After working on Good First Bugs for CoreCore Core is the set of software required to run WordPress. The Core Development Team builds WordPress., he landed on WordPress Playground blueprints, small files that spin up pre-configured WordPress environments instantly, with no hosting required.

He created blueprints for Hello Dolly and Disable Comments, opened pull requests in the official GitHubGitHub GitHub is a website that offers online implementation of git repositories that can easily be shared, copied and modified by other developers. Public repositories are free to host, private repositories require a paid subscription. GitHub introduced the concept of the โ€˜pull requestโ€™ where code changes done in branches by contributors can be reviewed and discussed before being merged by the repository owner. https://github.com/ repository, and reached out to the pluginPlugin A plugin is a piece of software containing a group of functions that can be added to a WordPress website. They can extend functionality or add new features to your WordPress websites. WordPress plugins are written in the PHP programming language and integrate seamlessly with WordPress. These can be free in the WordPress.org Plugin Directory https://wordpress.org/plugins/ or can be cost-based plugin from a third-party. authors. The PRs werenโ€™t merged before the program closed, but he documented his process and delivered a wrap-up presentation on WordPress.tv. His own framing: โ€œthis is certainly not the end for me in the WP ecosystem.โ€ That attitude, and the documentation trail he left, is exactly what sustainable contribution looks like.

All three graduated on the same day.

This plugin continues to be an inspiration for where to start extending WordPress

The moment that mattered most: reaching out directly

While Tโ€™Kai was submitting photos, several werenโ€™t getting approved. The Photo Directory has real standards around quality and description, and queues get long when many students are finishing at the same time or when big events collide.

Sharing links and documentation didnโ€™t move things. What did was going to the Photos Team page, finding the most active moderators listed there, and reaching out directly.

That message reached Michelle Frechette, who has contributed over 360 photos to the directory and has been part of this community for years. She responded immediately, explained exactly why the submissions werenโ€™t passing, and offered to review Tโ€™Kaiโ€™s photos before she sent more.

That single conversation did what weeks of links hadnโ€™t.

This is the lesson worth leading with for every new contributor: the WordPress community has no boundaries. People will help if you reach out to them. Not eventually, not after a queue, not via a form. Directly, by name, in the open.

What weโ€™d change: scope projects around what teams actually need

The โ€œ30 photos to the Photo Directoryโ€ framing comes from how WP Credits structures its immediate contribution opportunities: each participating team defines a minimum deliverable that signals the student has made a meaningful, complete contribution, 30 CC0-licensed photos for the Photo Directory, a theme review for the Themes team, a Good First Bug worked on during a Bug Scrub for Core, and so on. That baseline matters. It gives students something concrete to aim at, gives mentors a way to measure progress, and gives each contributing team a consistent definition of โ€œenough.โ€ So this isnโ€™t a critique of using a number as a goal.

But going through the cohort surfaced a hunch worth sharing. From experience organizing meetupsMeetup Meetup groups are locally-organized groups that get together for face-to-face events on a regular basis (commonly once a month). Learn more about Meetups in our Meetup Organizer Handbook. in the LATAM community and producing video, it often feels like organizers are short on the kind of CC0 imagery they need: photos for event pages, social posts, recap posts, banners. So one alternative framing for the photo path could be: contribute photos that WordPress meetup organizers can actually use. Thatโ€™s not a researched conclusion, just a sense from being on the organizer side of things.

Whatโ€™s more interesting is where that hunch points. In a recent conversation, Isotta floated a bigger idea worth surfacing here: what if we asked the Photo Team, and other contributing teams, what kinds of contributions they actually need right now, and turned those into specific tasks for students?

Thatโ€™s a meaningful shift. Instead of each team defining a generic minimum (any 30 photos, any theme review, any Good First Bug), teams could periodically share a short list of what would be most useful at a given moment, photos of specific subjects, theme reviews in a particular categoryCategory The 'category' taxonomy lets you group posts / content together that share a common bond. Categories are pre-defined and broad ranging., bugs in a specific component. Mentors and students could then choose from that list, knowing the work has a clear downstream use.

The finish line stays. The direction sharpens. And students learn the most important habit in open source: thinking about who will use your contribution before you make it.

This is a conversation worth opening up to the wider team. If youโ€™re a contributing team repTeam Rep A Team Rep is a person who represents the Make WordPress team to the rest of the project, make sure issues are raised and addressed as needed, and coordinates cross-team efforts. and have thoughts on what your team would surface as โ€œhigh-impact tasks for students right now,โ€ the comments below are a good place to start.

Takeaways for current and future mentors

A few things worth carrying into your own cohort:

  • Lead with the community early. Donโ€™t wait until something gets stuck to point students toward direct outreach in SlackSlack Slack is a Collaborative Group Chat Platform https://slack.com/. The WordPress community has its own Slack Channel at https://make.wordpress.org/chat/, on Make blogs, and on team pages. The lesson โ€œyou can just ask someoneโ€ lands better when itโ€™s framed as a first move, not a rescue.
  • Talk to the team your student is contributing to. Beyond the minimum deliverable, ask the contributing team what would be most useful right now. A short conversation at the start can turn a generic quota into a project with a clear downstream use, and gives the student a real audience to design for.
  • Respect async as the default. Your students may show up at 2:30 a.m. their time, on a Saturday, between feedings, between shifts. That counts. Build your check-ins to accommodate it.
  • Help students find meaning, not just completion. The most durable contributions come from students who chose a path because it mattered to them. Give them room to explore early, even if it costs a week.
  • Sweat the small operational details. Email mismatches, profile inconsistencies, missing form fields, these can hold up certificates and graduation. Catch them at the start.
  • Document the wrap-up. A blog post, a WordPress.tv presentation, a profile update โ€” documenting the journey turns one studentโ€™s experience into a resource the next cohort can learn from. Noahโ€™s wrap-up is a good example of what this can look like.

Thanks

A lot of people stand behind a program that looks simple from the outside. Thanks to the WP Credits team members who patiently helped this cohort sort through every kind of issue: Isotta Peira, Celi Garoe, Francesco Di Candia, Maciej Pilarski, and contributors @evarlese, @nilovelez, and @roblesloaiza.

And of course, thanks to Gabi, Tโ€™Kai, and Noah for trusting the program with their first open-source contribution, and for letting their experience help shape what comes next.


Are you mentoring, or thinking about it?

If youโ€™re a current WP Credits mentor with stories of your own, what worked, what youโ€™d change, what surprised you, drop a comment below. The more cohorts we document, the better the program gets for everyone.

If youโ€™re considering becoming a mentor, the Mentor Guide is the right place to start. The interest in this role continues to grow, and thatโ€™s a good sign of where WordPress is headed.


Props to @peiraisotta, @celigaroe, and @lidarroy for reviewing this post.

#community-team, #education, #mentorship, #wpcredits

Monthly Education Buzz Report โ€“ April 2026

Welcome to the Monthly Education Buzz Report, your go-to source for highlights and updates on the WordPress Campus Connect, WordPress Credits, and WordPress Student Club education initiatives within the WordPress community. This report aims to celebrate, promote, and inform individuals across the WordPress community and beyond about the diverse educational endeavors underway.

WordPress Campus Connect

WordPress Campus Connect (WPCC) continued its global expansion in April, with completed events across Asia, Africa, Europe, and Latin America. The programโ€™s cumulative numbers now stand at 5,586 attendees across 71 participating institutions, with 22 events completed in 2026 alone and 42 completed all time.

Completed Events

WPCC Rajshahi, Bangladesh โ€” North Bengal International University (March 26)

WordPress Campus Connect Rajshahi held an event at North Bengal International University with around 80 attendees. The session covered an introduction to WordPress, career opportunities in the WordPress ecosystem, and how AI features can be implemented within WordPress. Organizer Nazmul Hosen reported that the participants were enthusiastic, curious, and highly interactive throughout the program, and thanked the university for their warm support and hospitality.

WPCC Ekuitas University, Bandung, Indonesia (April 9)

Ekuitas University hosted a WordPress Campus Connect event focused on โ€œNative WordPressโ€ using Full Site Editing and helping students take their first steps into the WordPress ecosystem. Organizer Rahmat Gumilar thanked mentorEvent Supporter Event Supporter (formerly Mentor) is someone who has already organised a WordCamp and has time to meet with their assigned mentee every 2 weeks, they talk over where they should be in their timeline, help them to identify their issues, and also identify solutions for their issues. @devinmaeztri (Devin Maeztri), along with @piyopiyofox (Destiny Kanno) and @devmuhib (Muhibul Haque) from the WPCC team, and @debciriaco (Debora Ciriaco) for the design inspiration behind the event website. The team is now moving toward establishing a WordPress Student Club at Ekuitas and plans to share their experience with the Indonesia Career Center Network (ICCN) to help scale Campus Connectโ€™s impact across the country. Full recap and gallery.

WPCC Masaka, Uganda (April 11)

WPCC Masaka brought 100+ students together to build their first WordPress websites. @ssebuwufumoses (Ssebuwufu Moses) shared a recap describing how students went โ€œfrom Notepad to WordPressโ€ in a single day. Read the full recap.

WPCC University of Pula, Croatia (April 15) โ€” First WPCC in Croatia

The Faculty of Informatics at the University of Pula hosted the first-ever WordPress Campus Connect event in Croatia. Melita Poropat reported a day filled with practical learning and conversations spanning accessibilityAccessibility Accessibility (commonly shortened to a11y) refers to the design of products, devices, services, or environments for people with disabilities. The concept of accessible design ensures both โ€œdirect accessโ€ (i.e. unassisted) and โ€œindirect accessโ€ meaning compatibility with a personโ€™s assistive technology (for example, computer screen readers). (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accessibility), performance, AI, content, and the real process behind WordPress projects. Many students expressed interest in going deeper into WordPress design, development, and hands-on project work. The organizing team is already looking ahead to more workshops and opportunities for students to explore the WordPress ecosystem.

WPCC Pundra University of Science & Technology, Bogura, Bangladesh (April 20)

WordPress Campus Connect came to Pundra University of Science & Technology with 70 attendees. The event introduced students to the WordPress ecosystem, career opportunities, and the importance of community involvement. Students created WordPress accounts, joined a live workshop, and gained hands-on experience with basic website creation. Organizer @noruzzaman thanked the CSE Department, and recognized @devmuhib (Muhibul Haque) for supporting the event as a mentor, and @clk87 and Maruti for their guidance and encouragement.

WPCC Kakumiro 2026, Uganda (April 25)

WordPress Campus Connect Kakumiro took place at St. Edwards SS Bukuumi, bringing WordPress learning to students in the Kakumiro district. This event continues the strong presence of Campus Connect across Uganda, where the program has now held events in Jinja, Lira, Kaliro, Masaka, and Kakumiro.

Scheduled and Upcoming Events

Several WPCC events are underway or confirmed:

With 28 events in setup or planning, the pipeline is robust. Join the #campusconnect SlackSlack Slack is a Collaborative Group Chat Platform https://slack.com/. The WordPress community has its own Slack Channel at https://make.wordpress.org/chat/ channel or apply to organize if youโ€™re interested in getting involved.

WordPress Credits

The WordPress Credits program continued its strong growth trajectory in April, with new institutions, more graduates, and increased student activity.

Program Numbers

  • 70ย active mentorsEvent Supporter Event Supporter (formerly Mentor) is someone who has already organised a WordCamp and has time to meet with their assigned mentee every 2 weeks, they talk over where they should be in their timeline, help them to identify their issues, and also identify solutions for their issues. (up from 66 in March)
  • 306ย students currently active in the program (up from 292)
  • 66ย graduates to date
  • 21ย partner institutions acrossย five regions

New Partner Institutions

Three new institutions joined the program in April, bringing the total to 21:

  • E-zone School of Computingย (Uganda) โ€” the first WordPress Credits institution in Africa, connected throughย @stephendumbaย andย @mosescursorย (Moses)
  • D Y Patil Agriculture and Technical Universityย (Talsande, Kolhapur, India) โ€” signed during WordCampWordCamp WordCamps are casual, locally-organized conferences covering everything related to WordPress. They're one of the places where the WordPress community comes together to teach one another what theyโ€™ve learned throughout the year and share the joy. Learn more. Asia, facilitated byย @webtechpoojaย (Pooja Derashri) andย @anandau14ย (Anand Upadhyay)
  • One additional institution in the pipeline

The addition of E-zone School of Computing is a milestone: it marks the first WordPress Credits partner institution on the African continent, adding a fifth geographic region to the program alongside Asia, Europe, North America, and South America.

Institutional Highlights

Universidad Fidรฉlitas (San Josรฉ, Costa Rica) is finishing its first cohort of WordPress Credits. @roblesloaiza (Rita Robles Loaiza) shared that their second cohort will begin on May 11, making Fidรฉlitas one of the first institutions to complete a full program cycle and begin a second round.

Riga Nordic University (Riga, Latvia) announced that the university will participate in WordCamp Europe 2026 in Krakow, bringing WordPress Credits students and faculty into a flagship community event.

WPBakery is sponsoring student Kenny James Kuruvillaโ€™s visit to WordCamp Europe to support his thesis research on WordCamp participation, covering travel, accommodation, and ticket.

WordPress Credits Events

Several WordPress Credits-related meetupsMeetup Meetup groups are locally-organized groups that get together for face-to-face events on a regular basis (commonly once a month). Learn more about Meetups in our Meetup Organizer Handbook. and events took place or were announced in April:

WordPress Student Clubs

WordPress Student Clubs got a significant spotlight in April with a feature article on WordPress.orgWordPress.org The community site where WordPress code is created and shared by the users. This is where you can download the source code for WordPress core, plugins and themes as well as the central location for community conversations and organization. https://wordpress.org//news: WordPress Student Clubs Build Momentum, written by @webtechpooja (Pooja Derashri), an @bjmcsherry (Brett McSherry). The post documented how clubs are evolving from a follow-up to Campus Connect into a durable model for ongoing, student-led learning and community participation on campus.

The article described how organizers are finding success through small, repeatable activities rather than large events: regular learning sessions, peer-to-peer discussions, and small workshops that feel welcoming to beginners. Mentorship from local WordPress community members is helping students think through session structure and stay motivated. One organizer shared:

โ€œBeing a Student Club Organizer helped me improve my leadership and communication skills.โ€ โ€” Sanjeevni Kumari, WordPress Student Club Organizer, Mahila Engineering College, Ajmer

A notable example came from the International Womenโ€™s Day celebration in Ajmer, India, where around 50% of the 100 female attendees came from student clubs. For many, it was their first time participating in a broader community event.

Club Activity: ACERC Ajmer

On April 6, the WordPress Student Club at Aryabhatta College of Engineering & Research Center (ACERC) in Ajmer organized an interactive session for first-year students. Led by Vishal Israni and Vikas Kumar, the workshop featured a live demonstration of setting up WordPress on a localhost, an introduction to themes and plugins, and hands-on exposure to tools like Elementor and Fluent Forms. Students showed strong enthusiasm and curiosity throughout the session, actively engaging and asking insightful questions.

Clubs Forming From Campus Connect

The pattern of Campus Connect events seeding new student clubs continues. At Ekuitas University in Indonesia, the organizing team is now working to establish a WordPress Student Club following their April 9 Campus Connect event. In Croatia, the University of Pula team reported that students are already expressing interest in going deeper with WordPress beyond the initial event.

As @anandau14 (Anand Upadhyay) noted in the WordPress.org/news article: โ€œWith regular on-campus activities through WordPress Student Clubs, the real impact may become visible over the next couple of years, as a stronger WordPress ecosystem begins to take shape within campuses.โ€

Other Happenings

Education at WordCamp Asia 2026

WordCamp Asia 2026 in Mumbai (April 9โ€“11) was a major moment for WordPress education. The programs had a visible presence across Contributor DayContributor Day Contributor Days are standalone days, frequently held before or after WordCamps but they can also happen at any time. They are events where people get together to work on various areas of https://make.wordpress.org/ There are many teams that people can participate in, each with a different focus. https://2017.us.wordcamp.org/contributor-day/ https://make.wordpress.org/support/handbook/getting-started/getting-started-at-a-contributor-day/, conference sessions, and the Community Booth.

An Education table at Contributor Day was led by @hiabhaykulkarni (Abhay Kulkarni), and @gomp (Maciej Pilarski). The table welcomed students, educators, and community members who worked on documentation improvements, shared campus experiences, and brainstormed ideas for growing WordPress in academic communities. At the Community Booth, multiple visitors asked about Campus Connect and WordPress Credits, leading to follow-up conversations on Slack.

A panel on WordPress education initiatives brought together Campus Connect co-founder Anand Upadhyay, WordPress Credits admin Maciej Pilarski, and Raitis Sevelis (Head of Product at WPBakery and lecturer at Riga Nordic University). In the closing keynote, WordPress Executive Director Mary Hubbard described education as the projectโ€™s most important growth lever.

WordPress Facilitator Training Program Launched

The WordPress Facilitator Training Program was announced in April by @piyopiyofox (Destiny Kanno). This free, open, community-powered program equips anyone who knows WordPress to teach it to others. Thereโ€™s no application process, no prerequisite credential, and no gatekeeping.

The program has three components: self-guided courses on Learn WordPress, facilitation guides for running multi-day workshops, and facilitator slides to accompany those workshops. The first complete toolkit covers the Leading WordPress Education Programs course and includes a facilitation guide and facilitator slides. Pilot workshops are being lined up at schools in Bangladesh and India, and the full program details are in the WordPress Facilitator Training Program handbook.

The response was enthusiastic. Rico F. Lรผthi, a WordPress trainer, commented: โ€œA structured program that supports exactly that is something I have been missing.โ€

AI-Powered Tools for Creating Learning Materials

As part of the Facilitator Training Program, a set of AI-powered tools for creating WordPress learning materials was published in the Learn WordPress GitHub repository. These include structured prompts (usable in any AI platform) and a Claude pluginPlugin A plugin is a piece of software containing a group of functions that can be added to a WordPress website. They can extend functionality or add new features to your WordPress websites. WordPress plugins are written in the PHP programming language and integrate seamlessly with WordPress. These can be free in the WordPress.org Plugin Directory https://wordpress.org/plugins/ or can be cost-based plugin from a third-party. designed to help contributors co-write course content, create facilitation guides, and build facilitator slides in a standardized, WordPress-aligned way.

On April 30, Destiny Kanno led an online workshop walking contributors through the tools in action. The workshop recording is available on WordPress.tv.

WordPress Academy for Young People in Krakรณw

On April 20, over 60 high school students from Krakรณw took part in the WordPress Academy, a pilot initiative organized by the WordCamp Europe Local Team in collaboration with Klaster Zabล‚ocie. Led by @sebastianm (Sebastian Miล›niakiewicz), the five-hour event featured sessions on getting started with WordPress, SEO and accessibility, AI in WordPress, and a live-coding demo.

Students are now working on at least seven WordPress projects, from a new school website to a cookbook and a flashcard app. The organizers have encouraged students to present their projects at WordCamp Europe 2026 in Krakรณw this June, where @nataliabasiura (Natalia Basiura) will speak on the Rethinking Learning in WordPress education panel. WordCamp Europe 2026 will also feature an Education Table during Contributor Day and a dedicated Education track on June 6.

Get Involved

See something in the community that should be noted here or in a future newsletter? Comment below!

Stay tuned for next monthโ€™s update!

#education-buzz #campusconnect #wpcredits

Monthly Education Buzz Report โ€“ March 2026

Welcome to the Monthly Education Buzz Report, your go-to source for highlights and updates on the WordPress Campus Connect, WordPress Credits, and WordPress Student Club education initiatives within the WordPress community. This report aims to celebrate, promote, and inform individuals across the WordPress community and beyond about the diverse educational endeavors underway.

WordPress Campus Connect

March was a landmark month for WordPress Campus Connect (WPCC), with events reaching new countries and one of the largest recap articles in the programโ€™s history going live. The programโ€™s impact numbers page was also updated this month, giving organizers fresh data they can use in their own presentations and pitches to institutions.

Completed Events

WPCC KIST College, Kathmandu, Nepal

WordPress Campus Connect arrived at KIST College in Kathmandu with a full day of sessions and workshops. @utsavsinghrathour led a talk on careers in WordPress, followed by hands-on workshops from @codersantosh and Saroj Khanal. Students were engaged throughout the day, and many have already expressed interest in continuing their WordPress journeys and building a stronger community on campus. Organizers thanked Regan Khadgi and the KIST College team for their support in making the event run smoothly.

WPCC Keiser University, Nicaragua โ€” First WPCC in Nicaragua

The very first WordPress Campus Connect event in Nicaragua took place at Keiser University, bringing a packed agenda of sessions to students in the region. @roblesloaiza (Rita Robles Loaiza) traveled from Costa Rica to speak, sharing her expertise with local students. @alexcu21 provided key support with logistics and on-the-ground execution. Lead organizer @sion99 shared the best outcome: students left so inspired that theyโ€™re already planning to form a WordPress Student Club and are looking into joining WordPress Credits.

WPCC Career Institute, Faisalabad, Pakistan โ€” First WPCC in Pakistan

On February 28, Career Institute in Faisalabad hosted the first-ever WordPress Campus Connect event in Pakistan. Lead organizer Abdul Rahman Pomy brought together more than 90 students and 11 hosts, including speakers, organizers, and volunteers, after a month of preparation and dozens of planning meetings. Jesse Friedman from wp.cloud joined as chief guest via video call, and @devmuhib (Muhibul Haque) served as event mentorEvent Supporter Event Supporter (formerly Mentor) is someone who has already organised a WordCamp and has time to meet with their assigned mentee every 2 weeks, they talk over where they should be in their timeline, help them to identify their issues, and also identify solutions for their issues..

The event featured sessions from speakers Arfan Ashraf, Qammar Zaman, Usama Ijaz, and Waleed Tahir, covering WordPress fundamentals and career paths. Organizers Adnan Hyder, Sohail Anwar, Irfan Shafi, Muhammad Ikram, and Hamza Ejaz helped coordinate the day, with volunteer Abu Hurrairah supporting on the ground. Certificates included printed advice from WordPress community members Mary Hubbard, Rae Morey, Jeff Starr, Faraz The Web Guy, Chris Badgett, Anne McCarthy, Rich Tabor, and Miriam Schwab. The team is now looking ahead to establishing a WordPress Student Club at Career Institute. Photos and a video recap are available.

Event Highlights: WPCC Jinja 2025 Recap

The comprehensive recap for WordPress Campus Connect Jinja 2025 was published on WordCamp CentralWordCamp Central Website for all WordCamp activities globally. https://central.wordcamp.org includes a list of upcoming and past camp with links to each. this month, documenting Africaโ€™s first and largest Campus Connect program. Over a five-month period (with a two-month break for national holidays and elections), the WordPress Jinja community visited 12 campuses across Eastern Uganda, reaching 1,293 students and 81 educators. Led by @mohkatz (Mohammed Kateregga), the program brought hands-on WordPress workshops directly into classrooms using mobile ICT labs and local technology partners.

Student WordPress clubs were formed at multiple schools during the program, and these clubs will now serve as satellite communities of the WordPress Jinja MeetupMeetup Meetup groups are locally-organized groups that get together for face-to-face events on a regular basis (commonly once a month). Learn more about Meetups in our Meetup Organizer Handbook. while being gradually formalized through the WordPress Student Club program. The next milestone for the Jinja community is WordCampWordCamp WordCamps are casual, locally-organized conferences covering everything related to WordPress. They're one of the places where the WordPress community comes together to teach one another what theyโ€™ve learned throughout the year and share the joy. Learn more. Jinja 2026, tentatively planned for September 2026.

The team recognized their mentorsEvent Supporter Event Supporter (formerly Mentor) is someone who has already organised a WordCamp and has time to meet with their assigned mentee every 2 weeks, they talk over where they should be in their timeline, help them to identify their issues, and also identify solutions for their issues. @piyopiyofox (Destiny Kanno) and @mosescursor (Moses), along with supporters including @webtechpooja (Pooja Derashri), Harmony Romo, @peiraisotta (Isotta Peira), @thehopemonger (Arthur Kasirye), @clk87, and @muddassirnasim (Nasim Miah).

Also in Uganda, WPCC Lira became the third WPCC event series in the country and the first in Northern Uganda โ€” a sign that the programโ€™s footprint in East Africa continues to expand.

Scheduled and Upcoming Events

Several WPCC events are currently underway or confirmed for the coming weeks:

More events are in planning stages across Indonesia, Brazil, and other regions. Interested in organizing or supporting an event? Join the #campusconnect SlackSlack Slack is a Collaborative Group Chat Platform https://slack.com/. The WordPress community has its own Slack Channel at https://make.wordpress.org/chat/ channel.

Other WPCC Program Updates

Mentor program transition. The WPCC-specific mentor program has been retired and merged into the broader Event Supporters program. Eligible WPCC mentors are being onboarded as Event Supporters, and WPCC mentoring responsibilities now fall under the same framework used for WordCamps and other WordPress events. A new handbook page on Mentoring Campus Connect Events was published alongside this change. This streamlines the process, reduces complexity, and builds a more scalable support structure as the program grows.

Malaysia recap published. @muddassirnasim (Nasim Miah) published a recap of the first-ever WPCC in Malaysia, held at Universiti Teknologi Malaysia (UTM) in Johor Bahru on January 3, 2026.

WPCC Office HoursOffice Hours Defined times when the Global Community Team are in the #community-events Slack channel. If there is anything you would like to discuss โ€“ you do not need to inform them in advance.You are very welcome to drop into any of the Community Team Slack channels at any time.. Campus Connect Office Hours are now taking place in the #campusconnect Slack channel, giving current and potential organizers dedicated time to ask questions and share experiences.

WordPress Credits

The WordPress Credits program saw significant growth in March, with new institutions joining, new course formats launching, and continued momentum among students and mentors.

Program Numbers

  • 66ย active mentors
  • 292ย students currently in the program
  • 8ย graduates to date
  • 18ย partner institutions, across Asia (2), Europe (12), and North and South America (4)

New Partner Institutions

Ten new institutions joined the program this month, more than doubling the programโ€™s institutional footprint. The full list of current partners:

  • University of Pisa (Pisa, Italy)
  • Fidรฉlitas University (San Josรฉ, Costa Rica)
  • Franz Tamayo University / Unifranz (Santa Cruz โ€“ Cochabamba, Bolivia)
  • Riga Nordic University (Riga, Latvia)
  • Ahmadโ€™s Education (Dhaka, Bangladesh)
  • Krakow University of Economics (Krakow, Poland)
  • Cracow University of Technology (Krakow, Poland)
  • Central New Mexico Community College (Albuquerque, New Mexico, US)
  • IES Azarquielย (Toledo, Spain)
  • Creative Campus โ€“ Universidad Europeaย (Toledo, Spain)
  • Drew Universityย (Madison, New Jersey, US)
  • Escuela de Arte Toledoย (Toledo, Spain)
  • Escuela de Arte de Huescaย (Huesca, Spain)
  • ERAP Research and Learning LLP (Kolkata, India)
  • Juraj Dobrila University of Pulaย (Pula, Croatia)
  • Escuela de Arte de Zaragozaย (Zaragoza, Spain)
  • IES Venancio Blancoย (Salamanca, Spain)
  • Zaragoza Dinรกmicaย (Zaragoza, Spain)

Spain now accounts for the largest regional cluster, with seven institutions across Toledo, Huesca, Zaragoza, and Salamanca. This growth reflects the strong engagement from Spanish WordPress communities who have been active in both Campus Connect and Credits.

New Course Formats

Two new course formats launched on Learn WordPress this month:

These new formats expand access and flexibility for students and institutions with different scheduling needs, making it easier for more people to participate.

Student Spotlight: Self-onboarding Pilot

Out of 10 students from Krakow University of Economics who started the self-onboarding pilot, six are about to complete onboarding and will be introduced to their mentors soon. One student has already decided to contribute to the Community team. One participant shared this feedback:

โ€œIโ€™m already more than halfway through the onboarding โ€” itโ€™s really enjoyable to go through! A big plus is definitely the simple vocabulary and the fact that I can come back to the course anytime, at any stage.โ€

Early results like these suggest the self-paced format is working well for students who benefit from a flexible, go-at-your-own-pace approach.

Mentor Huddles

Two WordPress Credits Mentor Huddles were held in March, timed for different regions:

These regular meetings give mentors a space to share updates, troubleshoot challenges, and coordinate across time zones.

New Sponsor

Smarthost.pl has decided to support the WordPress Credits program and will offer students a domain plus one year of free hosting. This sponsorship is currently being added to the WordPress Credits page. Smarthost.pl joins WordPress.comWordPress.com An online implementation of WordPress code that lets you immediately access a new WordPress environment to publish your content. WordPress.com is a private company owned by Automattic that hosts the largest multisite in the world. This is arguably the best place to start blogging if you have never touched WordPress before. https://wordpress.com/ and Weglot as program sponsors, providing practical tools that help students build real WordPress projects during their contribution work.

WordPress Student Clubs

The WPCC Jinja recap highlighted a key development for WordPress Student Clubs: the student clubs formed at multiple schools during the Jinja Campus Connect series are now being gradually formalized and onboarded through the WordPress Student Club program. Each club has its own leadership and faculty support and will function as a satellite community of the WordPress Jinja Meetup while operating independently within their schools.

In Nicaragua, students who attended the first WPCC at Keiser University are already organizing to start their own WordPress Student Club. Similarly, the team at Career Institute in Faisalabad, Pakistan, has plans to establish a club on campus as a next step after their successful Campus Connect event.

These developments point to a healthy pattern: Campus Connect events are creating a pipeline of student energy that flows naturally into ongoing Student Club activity.

Other Happenings

New Course: Leading WordPress Education Programs

The Leading WordPress Education Programs course is now live on Learn WordPress. This course is designed for people who want to lead, facilitate, or support WordPress education initiatives, providing guidance on program structure, community engagement, and practical implementation.

Training Team Resources for Organizers

The WordPress Training Team published a Step-by-Step Guide to Building Campus Connect and WordCamp Event Websites in March, alongside the final installment of a four-part online workshop series on the same topic. All four workshop recordings are available on WordPress.tv:

These resources, produced by @devmuhib (Muhibul Haque) and @sumitsingh, are a practical toolkit for any organizer setting up an event website using the WordPress BlockBlock Block is the abstract term used to describe units of markup that, composed together, form the content or layout of a webpage using the WordPress editor. The idea combines concepts of what in the past may have achieved with shortcodes, custom HTML, and embed discovery into a single consistent API and user experience. Editor.

Impact Numbers Updated

The WordPress Campus Connect page on WordPress.orgWordPress.org The community site where WordPress code is created and shared by the users. This is where you can download the source code for WordPress core, plugins and themes as well as the central location for community conversations and organization. https://wordpress.org/ was updated this month with current program impact numbers. Organizers can now reference these figures directly in their own presentations and outreach materials when pitching Campus Connect to institutions and partners.

Get Involved

See something in the community that should be noted here or in a future newsletter? Comment below!

Stay tuned for next monthโ€™s update!

#education-buzz #campusconnect #wpcredits

Education Table at WordCamp Asia 2026 in Mumbai

Hello, WordPress contributors! ๐Ÿ‘‹

Weโ€™re excited to welcome you to the Education table at WordCampWordCamp WordCamps are casual, locally-organized conferences covering everything related to WordPress. They're one of the places where the WordPress community comes together to teach one another what theyโ€™ve learned throughout the year and share the joy. Learn more. Asia 2026 Contributor DayContributor Day Contributor Days are standalone days, frequently held before or after WordCamps but they can also happen at any time. They are events where people get together to work on various areas of https://make.wordpress.org/ There are many teams that people can participate in, each with a different focus. https://2017.us.wordcamp.org/contributor-day/ https://make.wordpress.org/support/handbook/getting-started/getting-started-at-a-contributor-day/ in Mumbai, India! Whether youโ€™re a student, an educator, a community organizer, or someone whoโ€™s simply curious about how WordPress connects with learning environments around the world, this table is for you.

Contributor Day is one of the best parts of any WordCamp: a dedicated space to get involved, meet people who care about the same things you do, and make a real difference in the WordPress project. We hope to see you there.

For the full Contributor Day schedule and other tables you can explore, check out the Contributor Day page.


About the WordPress education programs

The WordPress Community team runs education-focused initiatives designed to bring WordPress into colleges, universities, and learning environments across the world. At the Education table, we work across four programs:

WordPress Credits

WordPress Credits partners with educational institutions to integrate WordPress contributions into academic curricula. Students gain resources, training, and recognition for contributing to real-world open-source work, bridging the gap between the classroom and the global WordPress community.

WordPress Campus Connect

WordPress Campus Connect brings WordPress directly to educational campuses through hands-on workshops and events. These sessions help students discover what WordPress is, how it powers a significant share of the web, and how to start building with it, often for the very first time.

WordPress Student Clubs

WordPress Student Clubs go a step further by building on-campus communities where students can keep learning and collaborating beyond a single event. Clubs empower students to organize their own sessions, support one another, and develop a deeper relationship with WordPress and the open web over time.

WordPress Facilitator Enablement Program

The WordPress Facilitator Enablement Program is a free, open, community-powered program that equips people to teach WordPress topics to others. No prior teaching experience is needed. If you know WordPress and want to help others learn it, whether youโ€™re a developer, educator, freelancer, or community organizer, this program is a great place to start.


Contribution opportunities

There are plenty of ways to contribute at the Education table, no matter your background or experience level. Here are some of the things weโ€™ll be working on:

Review the WordPress Facilitator Enablement Program

The WordPress Facilitator Enablement Program handbook was recently published and weโ€™d love your fresh eyes on it. You can also take and share feedback on the programโ€™s first course: Leading WordPress Education Programs on Learn WordPress. Your input will help shape how this program grows.

Improve documentation and resources

Clear, accurate documentation helps organizers and contributors all over the world. At the table, you can help review, improve, and expand handbook pages and resources for WordPress Credits, Campus Connect, Student Clubs, and the Facilitator Enablement Program.

Share your campus or education experience

Have you organized or attended a Campus Connect event? Run a WordPress club at your university? Mentored students through WP Credits? Your real-world experience is genuinely valuable. Sharing it at the table can help shape programs that work better for students and educators globally.

Brainstorm and discuss

Some of the best contributions start as conversations. Bring your ideas for how to grow WordPress in academic communities, support facilitators, or make these programs more accessible globally.


Helpful resources for contributors

Getting familiar with these resources before Contributor Day can help you hit the ground running:


Who should join the Education table?

Anyone interested in the intersection of WordPress and education is welcome, including:

  • Students looking to learn about WordPress and open-source contribution
  • Teachers and professors who want to bring WordPress into their classrooms
  • WordPress MeetupMeetup Meetup groups are locally-organized groups that get together for face-to-face events on a regular basis (commonly once a month). Learn more about Meetups in our Meetup Organizer Handbook. and WordCamp organizers with an interest in campus programs
  • Community contributors interested in education initiatives
  • Developers and designers who enjoy mentoring and supporting beginners

You do not need prior contribution experience to join. If youโ€™re curious, thatโ€™s enough.


Things to prepare before Contributor Day

To make your Contributor Day experience as smooth as possible, here are a few things to set up in advance:

  1. Create a WordPress.orgWordPress.org The community site where WordPress code is created and shared by the users. This is where you can download the source code for WordPress core, plugins and themes as well as the central location for community conversations and organization. https://wordpress.org/ account if you donโ€™t already have one: register here.
  2. Explore the education programs at wordpress.org/education to get familiar with the initiatives.
  3. Browse the Education Handbook at make.wordpress.org/community/handbook/education/ for an overview of how things work.
  4. Take the course Leading WordPress Education Programs on Learn WordPress and come with your feedback!
  5. Join the conversation on SlackSlack Slack is a Collaborative Group Chat Platform https://slack.com/. The WordPress community has its own Slack Channel at https://make.wordpress.org/chat/ in the #campusconnect and #wpcredits channels on Make WordPress Slack.

Table leads

Abhay Kulkarni

@hiabhaykulkarni is a WordPress contributor and community organizer based in India. He led WordPress Campus Connect Kolhapur 2025, bringing WordPress to four campuses and more than 400 students, and has spoken at and organized multiple WordCamps across India. Abhay is also the co-founder of Jeevonix and an active contributor to WordPress coreCore Core is the set of software required to run WordPress. The Core Development Team builds WordPress., translations, and plugins.

Destiny Kanno

@piyopiyofox is a Community Education Program ManagerProgram Manager Program Managers (formerly Super Deputies) are Program Supporters who can perform extra tasks on WordCamp.org like creating new sites and publishing WordCamps to the schedule. sponsored Automattic based in Tokyo, Japan, where she drives education initiatives across the WordPress project. A two-time Make WordPress Training Team RepTeam Rep A Team Rep is a person who represents the Make WordPress team to the rest of the project, make sure issues are raised and addressed as needed, and coordinates cross-team efforts. and active contributor to the Community team, Destiny has been a key enabling force behind WordPress Campus Connect, the Facilitator Enablement Program, and the Leading WordPress Education Programs course on Learn WordPress.

Maciej Pilarski

@gomp is a Community WranglerWrangler Someone, usually a person part of event organizing team, who looks after certain things like budget or sponsors. at Automattic who has been contributing to WordPress since 2014. Based in Okinawa, Japan, he co-organized local meetupsMeetup Meetup groups are locally-organized groups that get together for face-to-face events on a regular basis (commonly once a month). Learn more about Meetups in our Meetup Organizer Handbook. and WordCamps across Poland before moving to Asia, and is a certified WordPress Credits mentorEvent Supporter Event Supporter (formerly Mentor) is someone who has already organised a WordCamp and has time to meet with their assigned mentee every 2 weeks, they talk over where they should be in their timeline, help them to identify their issues, and also identify solutions for their issues.. Maciej actively promotes WordPress Credits and Campus Connect as pathways for connecting academia with the global open-source ecosystem.


Join us in Mumbai

Whether youโ€™re new to contributing or a long-time WordPress community member, weโ€™d love to see you at the Education table on Contributor Day.

Come learn, share, and help shape how WordPress connects with students and educators around the world.

See you in Mumbai! ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ณ

WordPress Credits Mentor Huddles – Notes and Next Steps

WP Credits MentorEvent Supporter Event Supporter (formerly Mentor) is someone who has already organised a WordCamp and has time to meet with their assigned mentee every 2 weeks, they talk over where they should be in their timeline, help them to identify their issues, and also identify solutions for their issues. huddles will take place on SlackSlack Slack is a Collaborative Group Chat Platform https://slack.com/. The WordPress community has its own Slack Channel at https://make.wordpress.org/chat/ in the private mentor channel, with the following sessions:
โ€“ last Wednesday of each month at 9am UTC, starting on January 28
โ€“ last Thursday of each month at 5pm UTC, starting on January 29

This week we hosted the first two WordPress Credits mentor huddles, and it was great to see mentorsEvent Supporter Event Supporter (formerly Mentor) is someone who has already organised a WordCamp and has time to meet with their assigned mentee every 2 weeks, they talk over where they should be in their timeline, help them to identify their issues, and also identify solutions for their issues. joining from different regions to share experiences, challenges, and ideas. Thank you to everyone who made time to participate and help shape the program together!

Attendees: @celigaroe, @lasacco, @lumiblog, @webtechpooja, @peiraisotta, @organvlasti, @alexcu21, @evarlese, @francescodicandia, @nilovelez, @sirlouen, @arburola , @josvelasco, @nazmul111, @fahimmurshed, @shivashankerbhatta, @subrataemfluence, @sion99, @devmuhib, and @lidarroy

Table of Content

Mentorship and student onboarding

We discussed the onboarding phase as one of the most critical moments for students to build confidence and start forming connections within the WordPress community. Many students feel overwhelmed by early setup tasks, such as creating accounts and configuring tools, which can slow engagement. This is why is fundamental that mentors have a clear understanding of the full student platform and the entire student journey, in addition to regularly review student reports to stay informed on progress, spot blockers early, and provide timely support.

Communication and engagement

Communication seems to be a recurring challenge, with students often hesitant to ask questions and share progress in an async environment. As a concrete improvement, we agreed to add mandatory steps that prompt students to introduce themselves and regularly post updates in Slack, including in their contribution team channels. Hopefully, this will help normalize communication, increase visibility, and strengthen studentsโ€™ sense of belonging.

Language and learning resources

We acknowledged language as a significant barrier, particularly for Spanish speaking students navigating primarily English WordPress resources. To reduce friction, mentors agreed to expand multilingual support where possible and to enhance the mentor guide with resources that help assess studentsโ€™ knowledge levels and tailor guidance across contribution teams.

Mentorship structure

While we explored the idea of assigning an additional technical or specialized mentor after students choose a contribution team, we confirmed that each student will continue to have one primary mentor assigned before the program starts, supporting them throughout the entire experience. When students choose a contribution area outside their mentorโ€™s direct expertise, mentors will introduce them in the relevant team channels and help connect them with experienced contributors, while remaining responsible for weekly syncs and ongoing check-ins.

Improvements to the mentor course

On the training side, @lidarroy and @evarlese are expanding the mentor course to better support teachers and professionals who may not yet have contribution experience. Our goal is to help them confidently navigate WordPress community spaces and grow into well-prepared mentors.

Retention and community integration

We agreed that retaining graduates in the WordPress community beyond the program is a coreCore Core is the set of software required to run WordPress. The Core Development Team builds WordPress. goal. We began exploring strategies such as inviting program graduates to mentor new students and creating โ€œday in the lifeโ€ videos that showcase different contribution roles. Tailored actions aimed at retaining graduates will be defined in January and implemented into the program.

Upcoming cohorts

We will move from rolling start dates to fixed monthly onboarding periods during the first two weeks of each month starting in 2026. The January cohort will start on January 5, followed by February 2โ€“13 and March 2โ€“13. From January onward, we will also deliver a shared program presentation before onboarding begins, covering program structure, expectations, tools, and community spaces.

In Q1 2026, we will onboard students from Nordic Riga University, Universidad Fidรฉlitas, Krakow University of Economics, and Central New Mexico Community College, among others, applying these improvements as the program continues to grow.

Mentor huddles

Mentors will start meeting regularly, with monthly huddles becoming a recurring space to share feedback, surface challenges, and continue improving the program together. These sessions are open to all mentors and will take place on Slack in the private mentor channel, with a session on the last Wednesday of each month at 9am UTC, starting on January 28, and a session on the last Thursday of each month at 5pm UTC, starting on January 29.


Want to learn more about WordPress Credits? Visit the program page, join the #wpcredits Slack channel, and take a look at the handbook.

If you wish to apply as a mentor, please carefully read the mentor guide and apply using the form at the bottom of the guide.

#wpcredits

WordPress and Higher Education: An Alliance that Transforms

An Agreement that Opens New Paths

At the Faculty of Computer Science of Universidad Fidรฉlitas, we have taken a historic step: we signed an agreement with the WordPress FoundationWordPress Foundation The WordPress Foundation is a charitable organization founded by Matt Mullenweg to further the mission of the WordPress open source project: to democratize publishing through Open Source, GPL software. Find more on wordpressfoundation.org., turning our Computer Science students into key players in a global experience. Thanks to this partnership, every student will have the opportunity to complete an official internship through WP Credits, directly connecting with the WordPress community and its impact-driven projects.

This agreement reflects a deep conviction: higher education must be tied to the real digital ecosystem, with experiences that prepare students for jobs and to become agents of change within global tech communities.

Elineth Morera Campos (DeputyProgram Supporter Community Program Supporters (formerly Deputies) are a team of people worldwide who review WordCamp and Meetup applications, interview lead organizers, and keep things moving at WordCamp Central. Find more about program supporters in our Program Supporter Handbook. Director of 100% virtual courses at the Faculty) together with Mary Hubbard at the signing of the WPCredits agreement at WCUS25.

The Birth of the WordPress Campus Connect San Josรฉ 2025

To celebrate this alliance, we organized the first WordPress Campus Connect in San Josรฉ, Costa Rica, from September 23 to 25, 2025.

This event marked a milestone as the first WordPress Campus Connect held in Latin America within a university, open to participation from any individual who was a university student, regardless of their field of study or academic level, and carried out in a three-day hackathon format. Throughout the event, participants engaged in hands-on workshops, received direct mentorship, and took part in the WordPress HackLab, a competition designed to transform ideas into digital products with real societal impact.

Photo taken by Gabriel Ramirez, volunteer at WordPress Campus Connect San Josรฉ 2025
Photo taken by Gabriel Ramirez, volunteer at WordPress Campus Connect San Josรฉ 2025
Photo taken by Gabriel Ramirez, volunteer at WordPress Campus Connect San Josรฉ 2025

The Workshops: Learning with Energy and Creativity

The heart of Campus Connect lies in the eight workshops that guided students step by step in building their projects:

  1. From Zero to Website in 90 Minutes โ€“ How to quickly start and launch a functional site.
  2. Your Digital Empire, Brick by Brick โ€“ Strategic construction of a solid, scalable website.
  3. Think Like a Rebel: Create Without Asking Permission โ€“ Fearless innovation, exploring creative freedom with design thinking.
  4. Letโ€™s Dress Up: Branding that Hypnotizes โ€“ Keys to visual identity and branding to stand out online.
  5. Secret Vitamins for Your Website: What WordPress Doesnโ€™t Tell You โ€“ Advanced tips and features to power up any site.
  6. So Engaging Theyโ€™ll Read with Eyes Closed โ€“ Strategies for clear, persuasive, and AI-enhanced content.
  7. Houston, We Have a Website! (Go Live) โ€“ How to move a project from testing to production.
  8. Your Story on Fire (and in 3 Acts) โ€“ Digital storytelling and impactful project presentations.

These workshops were not only technical but also creative and strategic, showing students that WordPress is a living, open, and limitless ecosystem.

Cely Cruz, co-organizer of WPCCSJ25, giving her talk
Daniel Solano, speaker at WPCCSJ25 giving his talk
Ariel Ramos, speaker at WPCCSJ25 giving his talk
Rita Robles Loaiza, Lead Organizer of WPCCSJ25 giving her talk
Nicole, Nazareth, and Yiqi, co-organizers of WPCCSJ25 and speakers at the event, before giving their talk.
Rosita Pereira, Co-organizer of WPCCSJ25 giving her talk

The Challenge: โ€œReconnecting the Humanโ€

The central competition of the event was the WPCC 2025 Challenge: Reconnecting the Human.

The challenge stemmed from a paradox: we have never been so digitally connected, yet we have never felt so lonely. In response, teams had to create a digital product, presented in WordPress, that strengthens in-person human relationships within the university or local community.

The proposals were aligned with the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs 3, 10, and 11) and ESG principles. Within this framework:

  • SDG 3 (Good Health and Well-Being) encouraged initiatives to strengthen emotional health and reduce loneliness.
  • SDG 10 (Reduced Inequalities) inspired inclusive and accessible solutions for the entire community.
  • SDG 11 (Sustainable Cities and Communities) motivated proposals to rescue traditions and foster coexistence in public spaces.

At the same time, ESG principles framed the action plan: environmental care, positive social impact, and ethical, participatory governance. WordPress became the showcase to tell the story of the problem, the value proposition, the digital product, and the expected impact.

Photo taken by Gabriel Ramirez, volunteer at WordPress Campus Connect San Josรฉ 2025
Photo taken by Gabriel Ramirez, volunteer at WordPress Campus Connect San Josรฉ 2025
Photo taken by Gabriel Ramirez, volunteer at WordPress Campus Connect San Josรฉ 2025

The Organizing Team: The Force Behind the Event

None of this would have been possible without the dedication of a passionate organizing team that brought this first WordPress Campus Connect to life:

They were responsible for transforming a vision into a real experience, coordinating workshops, mentorsEvent Supporter Event Supporter (formerly Mentor) is someone who has already organised a WordCamp and has time to meet with their assigned mentee every 2 weeks, they talk over where they should be in their timeline, help them to identify their issues, and also identify solutions for their issues., logistics, communication, and every detail to make the event shine.

Part of the team of volunteers and organizers of WordPress Campus Connect San Josรฉ 2025
Organizing Team of WordPress Campus Connect San Josรฉ 2025

WordPress Club Fidรฉlitas and Its Podcast

Another historic milestone was the official founding of the WordPress Club Fidรฉlitas, a permanent space where students, faculty, and the community can come together to learn, share, and contribute to the WordPress ecosystem.

As part of this initiative, the Clubโ€™s podcast was launched, where we will talk about:

  • WordPress and its impact on the global web.
  • Technological innovation applied to education.
  • Academic and community experiences from Fidรฉlitas.

This podcast will serve as a bridge between academia and the international WordPress community, amplifying the voices of our students and their projects.

You can listen to the podcast here: WordPress Club Fidรฉlitas on Spotify

A Starting Point, Not the Destination

The WordPress Campus Connect San Josรฉ and the agreement with the WordPress Foundation are just the beginning.

Every student who participates in this program will take with them not only technical WordPress skills but also the experience of belonging to a global community, working with purpose, and using technology to generate human impact.

Inspiring Transformation

With this event, we proved that a university can be innovative, close, and global at the same time.

The invitation is clear: to keep dreaming, creating, and reconnecting the human through technology. Because when academia and community walk together, the impossible becomes reality.

Group photo of WordPress Campus Connect San Josรฉ 2025 taken by Manuel Macias, volunteer from the WordPress San Josรฉ community.

#campus-connect, #costa-rica, #fidelitas, #wpcredits

Call for Mentors: Join WordPress Credits

Weโ€™re looking for dedicated mentorsEvent Supporter Event Supporter (formerly Mentor) is someone who has already organised a WordCamp and has time to meet with their assigned mentee every 2 weeks, they talk over where they should be in their timeline, help them to identify their issues, and also identify solutions for their issues. to guide the next generation of contributors inย WordPress Credits, a flagship educational program of the WordPress FoundationWordPress Foundation The WordPress Foundation is a charitable organization founded by Matt Mullenweg to further the mission of the WordPress open source project: to democratize publishing through Open Source, GPL software. Find more on wordpressfoundation.org..

WordPress Credits connects university students with real-world, open-source contribution opportunities. Over 150 hours, students learn how to collaborate in distributed teams, work on meaningful projects, and gain valuable skills that bridge academia and professional pathways.

Learn more about the program:ย WordPress Credits Handbook.

MentorEvent Supporter Event Supporter (formerly Mentor) is someone who has already organised a WordCamp and has time to meet with their assigned mentee every 2 weeks, they talk over where they should be in their timeline, help them to identify their issues, and also identify solutions for their issues. Requirements

Mentor Responsibilities

  • Guide up toย 5 students per mentorย (if you have more availability, let us know โ€” we may assign additional students)
  • Support students in understanding contribution tasks and navigating the WordPress community
  • Encourage collaboration, accountability, and skill growth
  • Provide feedback on student progress and final projects

Additional Information

  • Mentors will beย vettedย before selection. You will receive an acceptance or rejection email after review.
  • Currently, we are onboarding students from a limited number of institutions. However, we want toย prepare a pool of mentors worldwideย so we can match you with students as soon as more universities join the program.
  • Your mentorship will help students connect their academic learning to real-world practice, while shaping the next wave of WordPress contributors.

Apply Now

If youโ€™re interested in becoming a mentor, please complete theย application form:

Your guidance can make all the difference in helping students grow, succeed, and feel empowered in the WordPress ecosystem.

+make.wordpress.org/training/ +make.wordpress.org/support/ +make.wordpress.org/docs/ +make.wordpress.org/marketing/

#mentors, #wpcredits