A chapter closes in crypto education history. My First Bitcoin, the non-profit that's been spearheading Bitcoin literacy programs, just pulled the plug on its partnership with El Salvador's Ministry of Education. The numbers tell quite a story—over 27,000 students got trained before this collaboration wrapped up.
What's particularly striking here? This wasn't some small-scale pilot. We're talking about a nationwide initiative that reached thousands of young minds across the country. The organization had been working hand-in-hand with government education officials to bring Bitcoin fundamentals into classrooms.
Why the split now? The official announcement doesn't spell out specifics, but the scale of what they achieved is undeniable. Training nearly 30,000 students represents one of the more ambitious crypto education pushes we've seen at the national level.
El Salvador's been no stranger to Bitcoin experiments since adopting it as legal tender. This education program was part of that broader vision—getting the next generation up to speed on digital currency basics. Whether this termination signals a shift in strategy or simply the natural end of a project cycle remains to be seen.
For context: initiatives like these matter because they're literally shaping how young people understand decentralized finance before they even enter the workforce. The long-term impact of reaching 27K+ students shouldn't be underestimated.
قد تحتوي هذه الصفحة على محتوى من جهات خارجية، يتم تقديمه لأغراض إعلامية فقط (وليس كإقرارات/ضمانات)، ولا ينبغي اعتباره موافقة على آرائه من قبل Gate، ولا بمثابة نصيحة مالية أو مهنية. انظر إلى إخلاء المسؤولية للحصول على التفاصيل.
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MetaverseLandlady
· منذ 11 س
كان من الأفضل أن تقول منذ البداية أنه لا أمل، فهذا هو النهاية
شاهد النسخة الأصليةرد0
GasBandit
· منذ 11 س
عجل بإلغاء ذلك، الأفضل. إنما غسل الدماغ في عالم العملات الرقمية للأطفال.
A chapter closes in crypto education history. My First Bitcoin, the non-profit that's been spearheading Bitcoin literacy programs, just pulled the plug on its partnership with El Salvador's Ministry of Education. The numbers tell quite a story—over 27,000 students got trained before this collaboration wrapped up.
What's particularly striking here? This wasn't some small-scale pilot. We're talking about a nationwide initiative that reached thousands of young minds across the country. The organization had been working hand-in-hand with government education officials to bring Bitcoin fundamentals into classrooms.
Why the split now? The official announcement doesn't spell out specifics, but the scale of what they achieved is undeniable. Training nearly 30,000 students represents one of the more ambitious crypto education pushes we've seen at the national level.
El Salvador's been no stranger to Bitcoin experiments since adopting it as legal tender. This education program was part of that broader vision—getting the next generation up to speed on digital currency basics. Whether this termination signals a shift in strategy or simply the natural end of a project cycle remains to be seen.
For context: initiatives like these matter because they're literally shaping how young people understand decentralized finance before they even enter the workforce. The long-term impact of reaching 27K+ students shouldn't be underestimated.