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Tech

Founder calls time on Birmingham software school

School of Code closes after ten years training the next generation of tech talent in Birmingham and beyond

Chris Meah has decided to call time on School of Code in Birmingham after ten years of teaching

It was founded a decade ago as a way of addressing a chronic skills shortage and lack of accessibility and diversity in the software industry.

But now School of Code in Birmingham is coming to an end as it teaches its final group of students.

Founder, chief executive and teacher Chris Meah will hang up his metaphorical pen and paper in March and embark on a new chapter in his career.

The school teaches people over 16 weeks how to write software code and has been responsible for launching countless careers in the tech industry at a time when the sector continues to bemoan a lack of trained professionals joining their ranks

At its core lies two key principles - courses are free to attend and open to all, regardless of age, working background and level of skill and knowledge.

Chris told BusinessLive why he felt now was the right moment to call time on the school after a decade of education.

"The last bootcamp has been coming for a while because I feel it's time to do something new and it's actually lasted a lot longer than I thought it would," he joked.