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Since September 2022
Instructor since September 2022
Learn IT - From beginners to computing to Advanced
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From 38.45 C$ /h
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Do you want to learn IT / Computing

Everything from beginners to advance

- How do computers work?
- How to use the internet?
- How to use Office (Work, Excel Powerpoint)?
- Learn about network and cloud computing?
- Anything to do with IT and computers, I can help you

Over 20 years experience in IT
Location
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Online from United Kingdom
Age
Children (7-12 years old)
Teenagers (13-17 years old)
Adults (18-64 years old)
Seniors (65+ years old)
Student level
Beginner
Intermediate
Advanced
Duration
60 minutes
The class is taught in
English
Availability of a typical week
(GMT -05:00)
New York
at teacher icon
Online via webcam
Mon
Tue
Wed
Thu
Fri
Sat
Sun
00-04
04-08
08-12
12-16
16-20
20-24
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Vincent
With over seven years of experience in teaching Computer Science & Information Technology (ICT), I have developed a strong expertise in delivering high-quality education across multiple internationally recognized curricula, including Cambridge IGCSE, GCSE, A-Levels, O-Levels, and Checkpoint. My passion lies in equipping students with coding, cybersecurity, and digital literacy skills, ensuring they are well-prepared for the evolving demands of the digital world.

Expertise & Teaching Areas:
✅ Programming & Software Development: Python, Java, C++
✅ Cybersecurity: Ethical hacking, data protection, network security
✅ Digital Literacy: ICT applications, online safety, cloud computing
✅ Data Science & AI: Data analysis, machine learning fundamentals
✅ Web Development: HTML, CSS, JavaScript

Curriculum & Pedagogical Experience:
🔹 Cambridge IGCSE & GCSE ICT & Computer Science – Teaching core and extended syllabi, focusing on programming logic, databases, and networking.
🔹 Cambridge A-Levels & O-Levels Computer Science – Preparing students for advanced computing concepts, problem-solving, and algorithm development.
🔹 Cambridge Checkpoint ICT – Building foundational skills in digital technology and computer applications.

Professional Impact:
📌 Mentored students to achieve top grades in Cambridge ICT & Computer Science exams.
📌 Developed interactive lesson plans integrating real-world applications of technology.
📌 Conducted coding boot camps and cybersecurity workshops to enhance practical learning.
📌 Guided students in project-based learning, including app development and website design.

With a strong commitment to student-centered learning and technological innovation, I am dedicated to shaping future tech leaders and empowering learners with skills relevant to careers in technology, data science, and software development.
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Raouf
Objective: To understand AI without fear, to use it to simplify one's life and to know how to identify digital traps.

1: Demystifying AI (What exactly is it?)
AI is not a movie robot: Difference between fiction and reality.

How it works (simply): The image of the "giant library": AI has read billions of books and uses them to predict the continuation of a sentence or create an image.

Where is it already present? Spell checkers, Netflix/YouTube suggestions, GPS, and voice assistants (Siri/Alexa).

2: Using AI to make life easier
Conversing with AI (ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini):

Ask him to write an administrative email or a complex letter.

Summarize a long newspaper article or document.

Plan a travel itinerary or find recipe ideas with what's left in the fridge.

AI for creativity and memory:

Generate images to illustrate a birthday card (Midjourney, DALL-E).

Using AI to restore or colorize old family photos.

3: Learning to "talk" to AI (The Art of the Prompt)
The context method: Why "Give me a cake recipe" is less effective than "I am allergic to gluten and I am hosting 4 people, give me a simple chocolate cake recipe".

The expert's role: Learning to tell AI "Act like a travel guide" or "Act like an expert gardener".

4: Precautions and Critical Thinking (The Survival Guide)
"Hallucinations": Understand that AI can make false claims with complete certainty (never take medical or legal advice from AI without verification).

Privacy protection:

Never give sensitive data (social security number, passwords, bank details) to an AI.

Knowing that everything we write to the AI is potentially used to train it.

Spotting "Deepfakes":

How to recognize a doctored image or video (details on the hands, strange reflections, slightly metallic voice).

Verify the information: the golden rule of cross-referencing sources.

5: Ethics and Impacts (To go further)
Copyright: Who owns an image created by AI?

The environmental impact: The water and energy consumption of AI servers.

The future: Will AI replace us or assist us?
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Contact Fas
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Similar classes
arrow icon previousarrow icon next
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Vincent
With over seven years of experience in teaching Computer Science & Information Technology (ICT), I have developed a strong expertise in delivering high-quality education across multiple internationally recognized curricula, including Cambridge IGCSE, GCSE, A-Levels, O-Levels, and Checkpoint. My passion lies in equipping students with coding, cybersecurity, and digital literacy skills, ensuring they are well-prepared for the evolving demands of the digital world.

Expertise & Teaching Areas:
✅ Programming & Software Development: Python, Java, C++
✅ Cybersecurity: Ethical hacking, data protection, network security
✅ Digital Literacy: ICT applications, online safety, cloud computing
✅ Data Science & AI: Data analysis, machine learning fundamentals
✅ Web Development: HTML, CSS, JavaScript

Curriculum & Pedagogical Experience:
🔹 Cambridge IGCSE & GCSE ICT & Computer Science – Teaching core and extended syllabi, focusing on programming logic, databases, and networking.
🔹 Cambridge A-Levels & O-Levels Computer Science – Preparing students for advanced computing concepts, problem-solving, and algorithm development.
🔹 Cambridge Checkpoint ICT – Building foundational skills in digital technology and computer applications.

Professional Impact:
📌 Mentored students to achieve top grades in Cambridge ICT & Computer Science exams.
📌 Developed interactive lesson plans integrating real-world applications of technology.
📌 Conducted coding boot camps and cybersecurity workshops to enhance practical learning.
📌 Guided students in project-based learning, including app development and website design.

With a strong commitment to student-centered learning and technological innovation, I am dedicated to shaping future tech leaders and empowering learners with skills relevant to careers in technology, data science, and software development.
verified badge
Raouf
Objective: To understand AI without fear, to use it to simplify one's life and to know how to identify digital traps.

1: Demystifying AI (What exactly is it?)
AI is not a movie robot: Difference between fiction and reality.

How it works (simply): The image of the "giant library": AI has read billions of books and uses them to predict the continuation of a sentence or create an image.

Where is it already present? Spell checkers, Netflix/YouTube suggestions, GPS, and voice assistants (Siri/Alexa).

2: Using AI to make life easier
Conversing with AI (ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini):

Ask him to write an administrative email or a complex letter.

Summarize a long newspaper article or document.

Plan a travel itinerary or find recipe ideas with what's left in the fridge.

AI for creativity and memory:

Generate images to illustrate a birthday card (Midjourney, DALL-E).

Using AI to restore or colorize old family photos.

3: Learning to "talk" to AI (The Art of the Prompt)
The context method: Why "Give me a cake recipe" is less effective than "I am allergic to gluten and I am hosting 4 people, give me a simple chocolate cake recipe".

The expert's role: Learning to tell AI "Act like a travel guide" or "Act like an expert gardener".

4: Precautions and Critical Thinking (The Survival Guide)
"Hallucinations": Understand that AI can make false claims with complete certainty (never take medical or legal advice from AI without verification).

Privacy protection:

Never give sensitive data (social security number, passwords, bank details) to an AI.

Knowing that everything we write to the AI is potentially used to train it.

Spotting "Deepfakes":

How to recognize a doctored image or video (details on the hands, strange reflections, slightly metallic voice).

Verify the information: the golden rule of cross-referencing sources.

5: Ethics and Impacts (To go further)
Copyright: Who owns an image created by AI?

The environmental impact: The water and energy consumption of AI servers.

The future: Will AI replace us or assist us?
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