Orange Programming Academy Graduates Develop Future Codes and Write Impactful Scripts
'Codes and scripts' are familiar terms in the world of programming, used to perform specific tasks or analyze and improve code for better performance. This is usually associated with software developers.
However, for the participants in Orange's 'Programming Academy,' the experience is a more personal and human one. It serves as 'pre-installed settings' within them, especially since they possess the skills to 'decode life,' write 'impact scripts,' and develop 'change programs' filled with passion, inspiration, commitment, and hard work.
From the far north in Irbid, through Amman, to the southern jewel Aqaba, students and graduates of Orange's Programming Academies write programming codes, but more importantly, they, along with their trainers, write 'life codes' every day, aiming for their ultimate goals.
Adi, Faten, Salwa, and others worked with their trainers and the dedicated team at the Programming Academies to help these young individuals and others integrate into the 'life program' after launching and developing it.
Orange Programming Academy Writes the Code for Success
Adi Al-Ghoul
Adi Al-Ghoul, a graduate of the Programming Academy in Aqaba, says, 'My transition from a software engineering student in Aqaba to the founder of OG Agency was the embodiment of a code whose components became clear to me, allowing me to define its development levels.'
Faten Al-Kasasbeh
Faten Al-Kasasbeh, a telecommunications engineer who joined the second cohort of the Programming Academy in Irbid and now works as a software developer at LuminousKey, emphasized that her six-month journey at the academy was not just a training workshop that enhanced her programming skills—a long-standing passion—but a real change that completely altered her career and life path.
Salwa Abu Afesh
Salwa Abu Afesh charted her path differently, now working at a startup. This was a result of the programs that help participants choose their path since the inception of Orange's Programming Academy in 2019. The academy assists young men and women in identifying their desires, choosing the right path, and enhancing their skills to match the job market needs, especially with an unemployment rate of 21.4% and a persistent gap between market requirements and educational outputs.
Many More Young Men and Women
Every story shared by Orange's Programming Academy graduates writes beautiful codes that reflect the academy's method, aligned with software development stages. The academy team, driven by the achievements of their graduates, understands the challenges, identifies their relationships, designs strategies, programs, and plans, then translates them into achievements. They work integrally with the students to achieve the ultimate goal, continuously developing their and the students' capabilities for sustainable results.
Like other creative fields that do not recognize obstacles or limitations, programming welcomes anyone with a desire to develop organizational skills, problem-solving abilities, and creative thinking. Programming languages, like all languages, become a true bridge for communication—this time, with life, goals, and ambition.
Our Employees on the Other Side of the Code Window
Trainer Rawan Abu Sini asserts that she draws energy from empowering trainees to 'develop themselves and achieve their goals.' She adds, 'As a lead trainer at Orange's Programming Academy, I see every day as a new opportunity for inspiration. What truly motivates me is the ability to share knowledge and skills with trainees.'
Trainer Ayman Jaradat, for whom the academy guided his path, says, 'When I was a university student, I realized the need to support young people in developing their skills and achieving their goals. The academy provided me with this support when I was a trainee, so I am happy to have this opportunity as a trainer now.'
Dana Al-Kukhun, the director of Orange's Programming Academy in Balqa, believes that the 'technological advancement we experience daily' makes their work extremely important in preparing students for the job market by developing their programming skills.
With each graduate joining the job market or establishing their own business, the academy's vision transcends being a mere goal, becoming a national-level program that decodes the challenges of unemployment and fills gaps in the job market, especially with an employment rate exceeding 80%.
Orange Programming Academy Graduates Develop Future Codes and Write Impactful Scripts
'Codes and scripts' are familiar terms in the world of programming, used to perform specific tasks or analyze and improve code for better performance. This is usually associated with software developers.
However, for the participants in Orange's 'Programming Academy,' the experience is a more personal and human one. It serves as 'pre-installed settings' within them, especially since they possess the skills to 'decode life,' write 'impact scripts,' and develop 'change programs' filled with passion, inspiration, commitment, and hard work.
From the far north in Irbid, through Amman, to the southern jewel Aqaba, students and graduates of Orange's Programming Academies write programming codes, but more importantly, they, along with their trainers, write 'life codes' every day, aiming for their ultimate goals.
Adi, Faten, Salwa, and others worked with their trainers and the dedicated team at the Programming Academies to help these young individuals and others integrate into the 'life program' after launching and developing it.
Orange Programming Academy Writes the Code for Success
Adi Al-Ghoul
Adi Al-Ghoul, a graduate of the Programming Academy in Aqaba, says, 'My transition from a software engineering student in Aqaba to the founder of OG Agency was the embodiment of a code whose components became clear to me, allowing me to define its development levels.'
Faten Al-Kasasbeh
Faten Al-Kasasbeh, a telecommunications engineer who joined the second cohort of the Programming Academy in Irbid and now works as a software developer at LuminousKey, emphasized that her six-month journey at the academy was not just a training workshop that enhanced her programming skills—a long-standing passion—but a real change that completely altered her career and life path.
Salwa Abu Afesh
Salwa Abu Afesh charted her path differently, now working at a startup. This was a result of the programs that help participants choose their path since the inception of Orange's Programming Academy in 2019. The academy assists young men and women in identifying their desires, choosing the right path, and enhancing their skills to match the job market needs, especially with an unemployment rate of 21.4% and a persistent gap between market requirements and educational outputs.
Many More Young Men and Women
Every story shared by Orange's Programming Academy graduates writes beautiful codes that reflect the academy's method, aligned with software development stages. The academy team, driven by the achievements of their graduates, understands the challenges, identifies their relationships, designs strategies, programs, and plans, then translates them into achievements. They work integrally with the students to achieve the ultimate goal, continuously developing their and the students' capabilities for sustainable results.
Like other creative fields that do not recognize obstacles or limitations, programming welcomes anyone with a desire to develop organizational skills, problem-solving abilities, and creative thinking. Programming languages, like all languages, become a true bridge for communication—this time, with life, goals, and ambition.
Our Employees on the Other Side of the Code Window
Trainer Rawan Abu Sini asserts that she draws energy from empowering trainees to 'develop themselves and achieve their goals.' She adds, 'As a lead trainer at Orange's Programming Academy, I see every day as a new opportunity for inspiration. What truly motivates me is the ability to share knowledge and skills with trainees.'
Trainer Ayman Jaradat, for whom the academy guided his path, says, 'When I was a university student, I realized the need to support young people in developing their skills and achieving their goals. The academy provided me with this support when I was a trainee, so I am happy to have this opportunity as a trainer now.'
Dana Al-Kukhun, the director of Orange's Programming Academy in Balqa, believes that the 'technological advancement we experience daily' makes their work extremely important in preparing students for the job market by developing their programming skills.
With each graduate joining the job market or establishing their own business, the academy's vision transcends being a mere goal, becoming a national-level program that decodes the challenges of unemployment and fills gaps in the job market, especially with an employment rate exceeding 80%.
Orange Programming Academy Graduates Develop Future Codes and Write Impactful Scripts
'Codes and scripts' are familiar terms in the world of programming, used to perform specific tasks or analyze and improve code for better performance. This is usually associated with software developers.
However, for the participants in Orange's 'Programming Academy,' the experience is a more personal and human one. It serves as 'pre-installed settings' within them, especially since they possess the skills to 'decode life,' write 'impact scripts,' and develop 'change programs' filled with passion, inspiration, commitment, and hard work.
From the far north in Irbid, through Amman, to the southern jewel Aqaba, students and graduates of Orange's Programming Academies write programming codes, but more importantly, they, along with their trainers, write 'life codes' every day, aiming for their ultimate goals.
Adi, Faten, Salwa, and others worked with their trainers and the dedicated team at the Programming Academies to help these young individuals and others integrate into the 'life program' after launching and developing it.
Orange Programming Academy Writes the Code for Success
Adi Al-Ghoul
Adi Al-Ghoul, a graduate of the Programming Academy in Aqaba, says, 'My transition from a software engineering student in Aqaba to the founder of OG Agency was the embodiment of a code whose components became clear to me, allowing me to define its development levels.'
Faten Al-Kasasbeh
Faten Al-Kasasbeh, a telecommunications engineer who joined the second cohort of the Programming Academy in Irbid and now works as a software developer at LuminousKey, emphasized that her six-month journey at the academy was not just a training workshop that enhanced her programming skills—a long-standing passion—but a real change that completely altered her career and life path.
Salwa Abu Afesh
Salwa Abu Afesh charted her path differently, now working at a startup. This was a result of the programs that help participants choose their path since the inception of Orange's Programming Academy in 2019. The academy assists young men and women in identifying their desires, choosing the right path, and enhancing their skills to match the job market needs, especially with an unemployment rate of 21.4% and a persistent gap between market requirements and educational outputs.
Many More Young Men and Women
Every story shared by Orange's Programming Academy graduates writes beautiful codes that reflect the academy's method, aligned with software development stages. The academy team, driven by the achievements of their graduates, understands the challenges, identifies their relationships, designs strategies, programs, and plans, then translates them into achievements. They work integrally with the students to achieve the ultimate goal, continuously developing their and the students' capabilities for sustainable results.
Like other creative fields that do not recognize obstacles or limitations, programming welcomes anyone with a desire to develop organizational skills, problem-solving abilities, and creative thinking. Programming languages, like all languages, become a true bridge for communication—this time, with life, goals, and ambition.
Our Employees on the Other Side of the Code Window
Trainer Rawan Abu Sini asserts that she draws energy from empowering trainees to 'develop themselves and achieve their goals.' She adds, 'As a lead trainer at Orange's Programming Academy, I see every day as a new opportunity for inspiration. What truly motivates me is the ability to share knowledge and skills with trainees.'
Trainer Ayman Jaradat, for whom the academy guided his path, says, 'When I was a university student, I realized the need to support young people in developing their skills and achieving their goals. The academy provided me with this support when I was a trainee, so I am happy to have this opportunity as a trainer now.'
Dana Al-Kukhun, the director of Orange's Programming Academy in Balqa, believes that the 'technological advancement we experience daily' makes their work extremely important in preparing students for the job market by developing their programming skills.
With each graduate joining the job market or establishing their own business, the academy's vision transcends being a mere goal, becoming a national-level program that decodes the challenges of unemployment and fills gaps in the job market, especially with an employment rate exceeding 80%.
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Orange Academy Graduates Craft Future with Code, Drive Innovation
 
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