Last November,
Treehouse showed its ambitious goal - to teach everyone to write code and design for Web, iOS and Android. Combining the best of Lynda.com and Codecademy, the Treehouse team uses high-quality video, testing, gaming training techniques in non-gaming environments and design-oriented training to teach you how to develop, even if the greatest Luddite in the world.

Due to the rapid growth of its subscriber base and income, last month Treehouse allocated $ 3 million to train 2,500 students.
The Treehouse Scholarship Program has offered 2500 free “Gold” accounts for students in the United States over the past two years. To participate, you had to be able to prove that you are actually a college student, for example, by having an email address in the .edu zone.
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Was the success of the scholarship program?
Founder and CEO of Treehouse, Ryan Carson (Ryan Carson), said he was shocked by the positive reviews and the subsequent flurry of comments on the announcement on his blog and on Twitter. The students "were very excited about the emergence of an optimal (and fun) way to gain knowledge that would allow them to easily find work in the future."
Carson says there are many representative offices from colleges and universities in the United States that allow students to participate in a scholarship program, such as UC Berkeley, Colgate, UPenn, Michigan, MIT, NYU, Stanford, Harvard, Duke and others. And at the same time, Treehouse received a lot of interest in the program, and, thus, the company was forced to abandon student recruitment. But since the program was designed only for US students, Treehouse decided to reconsider its position and go international and, in addition, double the size of scholarships.

Yesterday, on the
company's blog , Treehouse officially announced Round 2, saying the demand was so strong that they now offer 5000 Gold accounts for two years.
This time the study is open to students from all over the world and for any age as long as you are a student or graduated last year (and you are not a student of the current Treehouse).