This is the home of the Make Community team for the WordPress open sourceOpen SourceOpen Source denotes software for which the original source code is made freely available and may be redistributed and modified. Open Source **must be** delivered via a licensing model, see GPL. project!
Here is where we have policy debates, project announcements, and assist community members in organizing events.
Everyone is welcome to comment on posts and participate in the discussions regardless of skill level or experience.
Get Involved
If you love WordPress and want to help us do these things, join in!
Automattic and Hostinger will be our Global Leaders, and Woo is our Regional Powerhouse sponsor this year. If youโd like to know everything that comes with that, itโs all here.
These three organizations are the driving force behind a year full of WordCamps, MeetupsMeetupMeetup groups are locally-organized groups that get together for face-to-face events on a regular basis (commonly once a month). Learn more about Meetups in our Meetup Organizer Handbook., Campus Connect, and everything in between. Their support covers the real, unglamorous stuff that makes events happen: venue costs, catering, A/V, Meetup.com license fees for over 685 active groups worldwide, insurance, and more. In short, none of this works without them.
So: thank you. Genuinely. Every organizer who books a venue, every attendee who walks through the door of a WordCampWordCampWordCamps are casual, locally-organized conferences covering everything related to WordPress. They're one of the places where the WordPress community comes together to teach one another what theyโve learned throughout the year and share the joy. Learn more., every contributor who shows up to a MeetupMeetupMeetup groups are locally-organized groups that get together for face-to-face events on a regular basis (commonly once a month). Learn more about Meetups in our Meetup Organizer Handbook., theyโre all there, in part, because of what these partners make possible. Thatโs not a small thing.
Want to be part of the mission to expand WordPress access and education across the globe? Check out our sponsor page and apply today!
Hereโs to a great 2026. ๐
For WordCamp, Events and Meetup organizers: all 2026 event websites should display the 2026 Global Partners. For partners with multiple brands, please reach out to their points of contact to confirm which brand will be represented at your event.
This is a summary of the Community Team monthly meetings held on April 2, 2026. Both sessions followed the same agenda published on March 31. If you werenโt able to join live, this recap is for you, and weโd love to hear your thoughts in the comments.
We had participants from Spain, Bangladesh, Philippines, Germany, Switzerland, Serbia, Poland, Italy, India, Nepal, United Kingdom, Uganda, and Kenya, a good mix of time zones and corners of the WordPress world!
It was great to hear from so many active corners of the community. Among the things people have been working on: mentoring WordCampWordCampWordCamps are casual, locally-organized conferences covering everything related to WordPress. They're one of the places where the WordPress community comes together to teach one another what theyโve learned throughout the year and share the joy. Learn more. and meetupMeetupMeetup groups are locally-organized groups that get together for face-to-face events on a regular basis (commonly once a month). Learn more about Meetups in our Meetup Organizer Handbook. organizers, organizing local and regional events, sponsorship coordination, GatherPress development, WordPress Credits contributions, Campus Connect organizing, Polyglots work, and media partnerships.
A special welcome to @crixu from Germany, @r1k0 from Kenya, and @chetan200891 from India, who joined to explore for the first time, and to @alicjamaria26 from Poland, a student in the WordPress Credits program who joined at her mentorEvent SupporterEvent Supporter (formerly Mentor) is someone who has already organised a WordCamp and has time to meet with their assigned mentee every 2 weeks, they talk over where they should be in their timeline, help them to identify their issues, and also identify solutions for their issues.โs suggestion. Glad you all took the leap. ๐
๐ Highlights
A few things worth noting from the agenda that came up during the sessions:
Community Team at WordCamp Asia 2026 (Mumbai, April 9). Devin Maeztri is co-leading the Community Team table at the Contributor DayContributor DayContributor Days are standalone days, frequently held before or after WordCamps but they can also happen at any time. They are events where people get together to work on various areas of https://make.wordpress.org/ There are many teams that people can participate in, each with a different focus. https://2017.us.wordcamp.org/contributor-day/https://make.wordpress.org/support/handbook/getting-started/getting-started-at-a-contributor-day/, and a few attendees expressed interest in volunteering on the spot. If youโre going to be in Mumbai, thereโs still time to get involved.
WordCamps in Africa and around the world. @mosescursor and others shared updates on events held in Uganda and Nigeria. It continues to be exciting to see the African WordPress community grow. WordCamp recaps from Valencia and Bhopal were also celebrated, both milestone editions in their own right.
Campus Connect momentum. The program is reaching students globally. This monthโs highlights included the first Campus Connect in Malaysia and a multi-campus program in Uganda led by @mohkatz (that was also around in the meeting!) that reached over 1,200 students. Remarkable scale for a still-young initiative.
๐ Open discussions
These were the two questions that sparked the most conversation.
Where should content live: WordCamp CentralWordCamp CentralWebsite for all WordCamp activities globally. https://central.wordcamp.org includes a list of upcoming and past camp with links to each., Make/Community, or organized chaos?
Several people weighed in (and โorganized chaosโ did get a vote or two). The most useful framing that emerged from the conversation came from @mohkatz, who suggested Make Community for general announcements and WordCamp Central specifically for event-related news. @nilovelez proposed that Central is worth preserving for event-specific content, with Make as the home for general team news, and that Central posts can always be linked from Make. @unintended8 floated a possible distinction: โgeneral publicโ โ Central, โlearnings for organizersโ โ Make.
One thing everyone seemed to agree on: before we can make a real decision, we need to know where people actually read. Which platform has more reach? Which one drives more engagement? We donโt currently have a clear answer to that, and we probably should. One practical outcome in the meantime: it became clear that a spring cleaning of publishing permissions is overdue, nobody is quite sure who has access to write where.
The question isnโt fully resolved, what do you think? Leave a comment below.
How do we make these meetings worth attending?
This one hit close to home, especially for a meeting about meeting engagement.
@patricia70 suggested sending a direct message/email to the team reminding people that participating live and shaping the discussions matters. @unintended8 noted that many people have notifications off and may not even realize the meeting is happening, @aquila20 confirmed heโd missed it for exactly that reason.
In the Americas session, someone half-jokingly proposed a raffle among attendees. @tobifjellner offered a more structural take: with async channels available 24/7, the bar for showing up synchronously has to be high. He suggested that meetings might work better with slightly longer โopen windowsโ (12 to 24 hours) where threads stay active and input gets collected before closing, rather than requiring everyone to be present at the same time.
Thereโs something worth exploring there. If you have ideas, this comment section is a good place to start.
๐ข Announcements
2026 Community Team Reps. Juan Hernando (yeah, me) joined the team as a new Team RepTeam RepA Team Rep is a person who represents the Make WordPress team to the rest of the project, make sure issues are raised and addressed as needed, and coordinates cross-team efforts. for 2026, alongside the three continuing reps. The meeting was gracious enough to celebrate this, thank you all for the kind words. No pressure now ๐
Monthly Education Buzz Report โ March 2026. Destiny Kannoโs latest report covers another strong month for the education programs. Notable highlights include ten new institutions joining the WordPress Credits program and the launch of a new Leading WordPress Education Programs course on Learn WordPress. Worth a read if you work in or near the education space.
Campus ConnectโSpecific Mentor Program retired. Its responsibilities are now absorbed into the existing Event Supporters program, simplifying the support structure for WPCC events.
๐ค Open floor
Three topics came up outside the agenda and both deserve their own follow-up.
Community Summit planning. @patricia70 shared a post sheโd been working on for two months about scheduling a Community Summit alongside a flagship event in 2027 or 2028. The key point: this needs to be decided early, as it affects the host city call, venue capacity, catering, and the number of attendees. If you have any thoughts, head to that post and leave a comment.
Live captions and translation at multilingual WordCamps. @patricia70 raised the question of whether thereโs a community-owned account for live captioning and translation tools, something WordCamp Switzerland would benefit from, as they plan to host speakers in English, German, French, and Italian. @unintended8 shared that WordCamp Asia is using Interprefy this year (while past editions of WCA and WCEUWCEUWordCamp Europe. The European flagship WordCamp event. used Wordly AI) and that a conversation with the Central Production Team is already underway to explore a global account that multiple events could share. Switzerland and Canada were mentioned as natural early candidates apart from flagship events.
Where do declined applications go?@tobifjellner noted that there are many automated decline messages going out to cities and groups, and asked whether thereโs a public resource listing the most common reasons, something that could even be linked from application forms. @unintended8 confirmed that no such resource currently exists (or if it does, itโs buried deep in the handbooks), but that the idea is solid. Common reasons include applications from people without an existing local group or wanting to organize everything alone. This might be worth turning into a proper handbook page.
๐ฌ Join the conversation
If any of these topics sparked a thought (especially the meeting format discussion) drop a comment below. These conversations are better with more voices.
๐ Call for meeting facilitators
Community Team monthly meetings can be facilitated by any team member. Itโs a great way to engage with the broader community. If youโre interested, reach out to one of the Team Reps: @adityakane, @unintended8, @thehopemonger, @webtechpooja.
โฐ Next meeting
Community Team meetings are held on the first Thursday of every month, with two sessions to accommodate different time zones, in the #community-team channel on SlackSlackSlack is a Collaborative Group Chat Platform https://slack.com/. The WordPress community has its own Slack Channel at https://make.wordpress.org/chat/.
APAC/EMEA: May 7, 2026 โ 12:00 UTCAmericas: May 7, 2026 โ 21:00 UTC
One of the most consistent things I hear from educators, community organizers, and WordPress professionals who want to bring WordPress education to their institutions and communities is some version of the same question: where do I start?
They have the knowledge. They have the motivation. What they often lack is a clear, structured pathway to go from โI could teach thisโ to actually teaching it.
The WordPress Facilitator Training Program is our answer to that question.
What It Is
The WordPress Facilitator Training Program is a free, open, community-powered program that equips people to teach WordPress topics to others. It is designed for anyone who wants to facilitate WordPress learning: campus educators, community organizers, freelancers, developers, designers, or anyone else who knows WordPress and wants to help others learn it.
There is no application process. No gatekeeping. No prerequisite credential. The resources are free, openly accessible, and built around the spirit of open sourceOpen SourceOpen Source denotes software for which the original source code is made freely available and may be redistributed and modified. Open Source **must be** delivered via a licensing model, see GPL.: knowledge is not a scarce resource, and the more people who can teach WordPress well, the better WordPress is for everyone.
The program has three components:
Self-guided coursesย on Learn.wordpress.orgWordPress.orgThe community site where WordPress code is created and shared by the users. This is where you can download the source code for WordPress core, plugins and themes as well as the central location for community conversations and organization. https://wordpress.org/ that build the knowledge facilitators need to teach a given topic
Facilitation guidesย that provide a practical, session-by-session framework for delivering 2 to 3 day workshops, written for people with no prior teaching experience
The WordPress Facilitator Training Program Playbook, which orients facilitators to the program, explains what is in it for them, and gives them everything they need to get started
What We Have Built
The first topic available in the program is Leading WordPress Education Programs: a 9-module, 41-lesson self-guided course covering open source foundations, WordPress basics, contribution pathways, and all three WordPress Education Programs (WordPress Credits, Campus Connect, and Student Clubs).
A fullย 2-3 day workshop facilitation guideย with timed agendas, facilitator talking points, hands-on participant activity sheets, and reference appendices. This is a downloadable document which is available on the course page.
WordPress Education Programs are growing. Campus Connect events are happening at institutions around the world. WordPress Credits is bringing university students into the contributor community. Student Clubs are forming on campuses that never had a WordPress presence before.
Sustaining and scaling that growth requires more than a central team. It requires a distributed network of facilitators who are confident, prepared, and equipped to bring WordPress education to their communities independently.
The WordPress Facilitator Training Program is the infrastructure for that network. It is how we go from a program that depends on a small number of people to one that can grow wherever there are people willing to teach.
It also creates a genuine opportunity for facilitators themselves. Institutions, bootcamps, and companies increasingly need qualified people to deliver WordPress training. Facilitators who build a track record through this program position themselves for those opportunities. And as the WordPress ecosystem continues to develop credential pathways, such as the AI Leaders micro-credential piloted earlier this year at https://wordpress.org/news/2026/02/ai-leaders-credential/, facilitators who complete the relevant courses will be positioned to earn credentials that carry real professional value.
Where It Is Headed
The topic library is just beginning. The first course covers WordPress Education Programs. Future topics will draw from the broad range of WordPress skills and knowledge areas already represented on Learn.wordpress.org, as well as new courses developed specifically for the facilitator program. Every new topic that gets a well-designed course and a strong facilitation guide is another topic that community facilitators anywhere in the world can teach.
If you have expertise in a WordPress topic and are interested in contributing a course or facilitation guide, the WordPress Training Team at https://make.wordpress.org/training/ is the right place to connect.
We Want Your Feedback
The Leading WordPress Education Programs course is publicly available now and under active review. If you explore it, we would genuinely love to hear what you think. A few questions we are actively looking for input on:
Is the course content clear and accessible for a beginner-level educator?
Are there topics or lessons you feel are missing or underrepresented?
Does the course give you enough to feel prepared to facilitate a workshop on these topics?
Beyond the course itself, we are also interested in feedback on the program structure:
What topics would you most like to see added to the facilitator program?
What would make this program more useful to you in your context, whether that is a campus, a MeetupMeetupMeetup groups are locally-organized groups that get together for face-to-face events on a regular basis (commonly once a month). Learn more about Meetups in our Meetup Organizer Handbook., a bootcamp, or a company?
Are you interested in participating in an internal dry run of the 2-3 day workshop? If so, please note that we are actively looking for volunteers for this step.
The WordPress community has always grown because people show up, share what they know, and help others do the same. This program is an extension of that. We are building something that should not belong to one team or one organization. It should belong to the community.
We are just getting started, and we would love to have you be part of it.
In the November 2025 Community Team meeting in SlackSlackSlack is a Collaborative Group Chat Platform https://slack.com/. The WordPress community has its own Slack Channel at https://make.wordpress.org/chat/, I asked the following question:
[โฆ] Is there any plan for a Community Summit alongside a flagship event in 2027 or 2028, so future organizers know about it when applying to be a host city?
[โฆ] If you and other community members want to organize it, please start a discussion and publish a post with what you have in mind so everyone can chime in, and if it moves forward, an organizing team can be created.
Looking back at previous Community Summits
The WordPress project has already benefited greatly from Community Summits in the past. For reference and historical context, you can find:
These past editions show how valuable it is to have a dedicated space, alongside a flagship event, for deeper conversations focused specifically on the WordPress Community.
A proposal for 2027 or 2028
The idea is to explore whether a Community Summit could be organized alongside a flagship WordPress event in 2027 or 2028, for example alongside WordCampWordCampWordCamps are casual, locally-organized conferences covering everything related to WordPress. They're one of the places where the WordPress community comes together to teach one another what theyโve learned throughout the year and share the joy. Learn more. Asia or WordCamp Europe, given that the most recent Community Summit took place in the United States in 2023.
This post is an invitation to Community members from those regions, or from the Community at large, to chime in, share perspectives, and, as a next step, potentially take on roles in shaping and organizing the Summit.
What organizing a Community Summit involves
Based on previous editions and experience from flagship events, organizing a Community Summit would require:
Working with the Local team and the Local Team Helper (if an external company is involved, like at WordCamp Europe) for venue, catering, and other logistics.
Coordinating with WordPress leadership and the WordPress FoundationWordPress FoundationThe WordPress Foundation is a charitable organization founded by Matt Mullenweg to further the mission of the WordPress open source project: to democratize publishing through Open Source, GPL software. Find more on wordpressfoundation.org. to ensure alignment, support, and clarity around goals and constraints.
Drafting a program and discussion formats that reflect current community topics, challenges, and opportunities, and that allows for meaningful discussions.
Call for interest
If you are interested in:
Helping organize a future Community Summit
Sharing thoughts on whether 2027 or 2028 would make sense
Sharing thoughts on which flagship WordCamp it could be organized alongside
Suggesting formats, goals and potential new ideas that would differ from past Summits
Participating in program design or facilitation
Suggesting approaches for post-event follow-ups, to help ensure that the projects, decisions, and actions agreed on during the Summit can effectively move forward
Please leave a comment on this post by April 30, 2026. Showing interest is the first step toward seeing whether there is enough energy and commitment in the Community to move this forward and, if so, to form an organizing team.
Looking forward to hearing the Communityโs thoughts.
Welcome to the Monthly Education Buzz Report, your go-to source for highlights and updates on the WordPress Campus Connect, WordPress Credits, and WordPress Student Club education initiatives within the WordPress community. This report aims to celebrate, promote, and inform individuals across the WordPress community and beyond about the diverse educational endeavors underway.
WordPress Campus Connect
March was a landmark month for WordPress Campus Connect (WPCC), with events reaching new countries and one of the largest recap articles in the programโs history going live. The programโs impact numbers page was also updated this month, giving organizers fresh data they can use in their own presentations and pitches to institutions.
Completed Events
WPCC KIST College, Kathmandu, Nepal
WordPress Campus Connect arrived at KIST College in Kathmandu with a full day of sessions and workshops. @utsavsinghrathour led a talk on careers in WordPress, followed by hands-on workshops from @codersantosh and Saroj Khanal. Students were engaged throughout the day, and many have already expressed interest in continuing their WordPress journeys and building a stronger community on campus. Organizers thanked Regan Khadgi and the KIST College team for their support in making the event run smoothly.
WPCC Keiser University, Nicaragua โ First WPCC in Nicaragua
The very first WordPress Campus Connect event in Nicaragua took place at Keiser University, bringing a packed agenda of sessions to students in the region. @roblesloaiza (Rita Robles Loaiza) traveled from Costa Rica to speak, sharing her expertise with local students. @alexcu21 provided key support with logistics and on-the-ground execution. Lead organizer @sion99 shared the best outcome: students left so inspired that theyโre already planning to form a WordPress Student Club and are looking into joining WordPress Credits.
WPCC Career Institute, Faisalabad, Pakistan โ First WPCC in Pakistan
On February 28, Career Institute in Faisalabad hosted the first-ever WordPress Campus Connect event in Pakistan. Lead organizer Abdul Rahman Pomy brought together more than 90 students and 11 hosts, including speakers, organizers, and volunteers, after a month of preparation and dozens of planning meetings. Jesse Friedman from wp.cloud joined as chief guest via video call, and @devmuhib (Muhibul Haque) served as event mentorEvent SupporterEvent Supporter (formerly Mentor) is someone who has already organised a WordCamp and has time to meet with their assigned mentee every 2 weeks, they talk over where they should be in their timeline, help them to identify their issues, and also identify solutions for their issues..
The event featured sessions from speakers Arfan Ashraf, Qammar Zaman, Usama Ijaz, and Waleed Tahir, covering WordPress fundamentals and career paths. Organizers Adnan Hyder, Sohail Anwar, Irfan Shafi, Muhammad Ikram, and Hamza Ejaz helped coordinate the day, with volunteer Abu Hurrairah supporting on the ground. Certificates included printed advice from WordPress community members Mary Hubbard, Rae Morey, Jeff Starr, Faraz The Web Guy, Chris Badgett, Anne McCarthy, Rich Tabor, and Miriam Schwab. The team is now looking ahead to establishing a WordPress Student Club at Career Institute. Photos and a video recap are available.
Event Highlights: WPCC Jinja 2025 Recap
The comprehensive recap for WordPress Campus Connect Jinja 2025 was published on WordCamp CentralWordCamp CentralWebsite for all WordCamp activities globally. https://central.wordcamp.org includes a list of upcoming and past camp with links to each. this month, documenting Africaโs first and largest Campus Connect program. Over a five-month period (with a two-month break for national holidays and elections), the WordPress Jinja community visited 12 campuses across Eastern Uganda, reaching 1,293 students and 81 educators. Led by @mohkatz (Mohammed Kateregga), the program brought hands-on WordPress workshops directly into classrooms using mobile ICT labs and local technology partners.
Student WordPress clubs were formed at multiple schools during the program, and these clubs will now serve as satellite communities of the WordPress Jinja MeetupMeetupMeetup groups are locally-organized groups that get together for face-to-face events on a regular basis (commonly once a month). Learn more about Meetups in our Meetup Organizer Handbook. while being gradually formalized through the WordPress Student Club program. The next milestone for the Jinja community is WordCampWordCampWordCamps are casual, locally-organized conferences covering everything related to WordPress. They're one of the places where the WordPress community comes together to teach one another what theyโve learned throughout the year and share the joy. Learn more. Jinja 2026, tentatively planned for September 2026.
The team recognized their mentorsEvent SupporterEvent Supporter (formerly Mentor) is someone who has already organised a WordCamp and has time to meet with their assigned mentee every 2 weeks, they talk over where they should be in their timeline, help them to identify their issues, and also identify solutions for their issues.@piyopiyofox (Destiny Kanno) and @mosescursor (Moses), along with supporters including @webtechpooja (Pooja Derashri), Harmony Romo, @peiraisotta (Isotta Peira), @thehopemonger (Arthur Kasirye), @clk87, and @muddassirnasim (Nasim Miah).
Also in Uganda, WPCC Lira became the third WPCC event series in the country and the first in Northern Uganda โ a sign that the programโs footprint in East Africa continues to expand.
Scheduled and Upcoming Events
Several WPCC events are currently underway or confirmed for the coming weeks:
More events are in planning stages across Indonesia, Brazil, and other regions. Interested in organizing or supporting an event? Join the #campusconnectSlackSlackSlack is a Collaborative Group Chat Platform https://slack.com/. The WordPress community has its own Slack Channel at https://make.wordpress.org/chat/ channel.
Other WPCC Program Updates
Mentor program transition. The WPCC-specific mentor program has been retired and merged into the broader Event Supporters program. Eligible WPCC mentors are being onboarded as Event Supporters, and WPCC mentoring responsibilities now fall under the same framework used for WordCamps and other WordPress events. A new handbook page on Mentoring Campus Connect Events was published alongside this change. This streamlines the process, reduces complexity, and builds a more scalable support structure as the program grows.
WPCC Office HoursOffice HoursDefined times when the Global Community Team are in the #community-events Slack channel. If there is anything you would like to discuss โ you do not need to inform them in advance.You are very welcome to drop into any of the Community Team Slack channels at any time.. Campus Connect Office Hours are now taking place in the #campusconnect Slack channel, giving current and potential organizers dedicated time to ask questions and share experiences.
WordPress Credits
The WordPress Credits program saw significant growth in March, with new institutions joining, new course formats launching, and continued momentum among students and mentors.
Program Numbers
66ย active mentors
292ย students currently in the program
8ย graduates to date
18ย partner institutions, across Asia (2), Europe (12), and North and South America (4)
New Partner Institutions
Ten new institutions joined the program this month, more than doubling the programโs institutional footprint. The full list of current partners:
University of Pisa (Pisa, Italy)
Fidรฉlitas University (San Josรฉ, Costa Rica)
Franz Tamayo University / Unifranz (Santa Cruz โ Cochabamba, Bolivia)
Riga Nordic University (Riga, Latvia)
Ahmadโs Education (Dhaka, Bangladesh)
Krakow University of Economics (Krakow, Poland)
Cracow University of Technology (Krakow, Poland)
Central New Mexico Community College (Albuquerque, New Mexico, US)
IES Azarquielย (Toledo, Spain)
Creative Campus โ Universidad Europeaย (Toledo, Spain)
Drew Universityย (Madison, New Jersey, US)
Escuela de Arte Toledoย (Toledo, Spain)
Escuela de Arte de Huescaย (Huesca, Spain)
ERAP Research and Learning LLP (Kolkata, India)
Juraj Dobrila University of Pulaย (Pula, Croatia)
Escuela de Arte de Zaragozaย (Zaragoza, Spain)
IES Venancio Blancoย (Salamanca, Spain)
Zaragoza Dinรกmicaย (Zaragoza, Spain)
Spain now accounts for the largest regional cluster, with seven institutions across Toledo, Huesca, Zaragoza, and Salamanca. This growth reflects the strong engagement from Spanish WordPress communities who have been active in both Campus Connect and Credits.
New Course Formats
Two new course formats launched on Learn WordPress this month:
WordPress Credits โ Self-onboarding Pilotย โ A self-paced onboarding experience designed to let students work through the initial program steps independently before being matched with a mentor.
WordPress Credits โ 50 hoursย โ A condensed version of the program structured around a 50-hour contribution commitment.
These new formats expand access and flexibility for students and institutions with different scheduling needs, making it easier for more people to participate.
Student Spotlight: Self-onboarding Pilot
Out of 10 students from Krakow University of Economics who started the self-onboarding pilot, six are about to complete onboarding and will be introduced to their mentors soon. One student has already decided to contribute to the Community team. One participant shared this feedback:
โIโm already more than halfway through the onboarding โ itโs really enjoyable to go through! A big plus is definitely the simple vocabulary and the fact that I can come back to the course anytime, at any stage.โ
Early results like these suggest the self-paced format is working well for students who benefit from a flexible, go-at-your-own-pace approach.
Mentor Huddles
Two WordPress Credits Mentor Huddles were held in March, timed for different regions:
These regular meetings give mentors a space to share updates, troubleshoot challenges, and coordinate across time zones.
New Sponsor
Smarthost.pl has decided to support the WordPress Credits program and will offer students a domain plus one year of free hosting. This sponsorship is currently being added to the WordPress Credits page. Smarthost.pl joins WordPress.comWordPress.comAn online implementation of WordPress code that lets you immediately access a new WordPress environment to publish your content. WordPress.com is a private company owned by Automattic that hosts the largest multisite in the world. This is arguably the best place to start blogging if you have never touched WordPress before. https://wordpress.com/ and Weglot as program sponsors, providing practical tools that help students build real WordPress projects during their contribution work.
WordPress Student Clubs
The WPCC Jinja recap highlighted a key development for WordPress Student Clubs: the student clubs formed at multiple schools during the Jinja Campus Connect series are now being gradually formalized and onboarded through the WordPress Student Club program. Each club has its own leadership and faculty support and will function as a satellite community of the WordPress Jinja Meetup while operating independently within their schools.
In Nicaragua, students who attended the first WPCC at Keiser University are already organizing to start their own WordPress Student Club. Similarly, the team at Career Institute in Faisalabad, Pakistan, has plans to establish a club on campus as a next step after their successful Campus Connect event.
These developments point to a healthy pattern: Campus Connect events are creating a pipeline of student energy that flows naturally into ongoing Student Club activity.
Other Happenings
New Course: Leading WordPress Education Programs
The Leading WordPress Education Programs course is now live on Learn WordPress. This course is designed for people who want to lead, facilitate, or support WordPress education initiatives, providing guidance on program structure, community engagement, and practical implementation.
These resources, produced by @devmuhib (Muhibul Haque) and @sumitsingh, are a practical toolkit for any organizer setting up an event website using the WordPress BlockBlockBlock is the abstract term used to describe units of markup that, composed together, form the content or layout of a webpage using the WordPress editor. The idea combines concepts of what in the past may have achieved with shortcodes, custom HTML, and embed discovery into a single consistent API and user experience. Editor.
Impact Numbers Updated
The WordPress Campus Connect page on WordPress.orgWordPress.orgThe community site where WordPress code is created and shared by the users. This is where you can download the source code for WordPress core, plugins and themes as well as the central location for community conversations and organization. https://wordpress.org/ was updated this month with current program impact numbers. Organizers can now reference these figures directly in their own presentations and outreach materials when pitching Campus Connect to institutions and partners.
Weโre excited to welcome you to the Education table at WordCampWordCampWordCamps are casual, locally-organized conferences covering everything related to WordPress. They're one of the places where the WordPress community comes together to teach one another what theyโve learned throughout the year and share the joy. Learn more. Asia 2026 Contributor DayContributor DayContributor Days are standalone days, frequently held before or after WordCamps but they can also happen at any time. They are events where people get together to work on various areas of https://make.wordpress.org/ There are many teams that people can participate in, each with a different focus. https://2017.us.wordcamp.org/contributor-day/https://make.wordpress.org/support/handbook/getting-started/getting-started-at-a-contributor-day/ in Mumbai, India! Whether youโre a student, an educator, a community organizer, or someone whoโs simply curious about how WordPress connects with learning environments around the world, this table is for you.
Contributor Day is one of the best parts of any WordCamp: a dedicated space to get involved, meet people who care about the same things you do, and make a real difference in the WordPress project. We hope to see you there.
For the full Contributor Day schedule and other tables you can explore, check out the Contributor Day page.
About the WordPress education programs
The WordPress Community team runs education-focused initiatives designed to bring WordPress into colleges, universities, and learning environments across the world. At the Education table, we work across four programs:
WordPress Credits
WordPress Credits partners with educational institutions to integrate WordPress contributions into academic curricula. Students gain resources, training, and recognition for contributing to real-world open-source work, bridging the gap between the classroom and the global WordPress community.
WordPress Campus Connect
WordPress Campus Connect brings WordPress directly to educational campuses through hands-on workshops and events. These sessions help students discover what WordPress is, how it powers a significant share of the web, and how to start building with it, often for the very first time.
WordPress Student Clubs
WordPress Student Clubs go a step further by building on-campus communities where students can keep learning and collaborating beyond a single event. Clubs empower students to organize their own sessions, support one another, and develop a deeper relationship with WordPress and the open web over time.
WordPress Facilitator Enablement Program
The WordPress Facilitator Enablement Program is a free, open, community-powered program that equips people to teach WordPress topics to others. No prior teaching experience is needed. If you know WordPress and want to help others learn it, whether youโre a developer, educator, freelancer, or community organizer, this program is a great place to start.
Contribution opportunities
There are plenty of ways to contribute at the Education table, no matter your background or experience level. Here are some of the things weโll be working on:
Review the WordPress Facilitator Enablement Program
Clear, accurate documentation helps organizers and contributors all over the world. At the table, you can help review, improve, and expand handbook pages and resources for WordPress Credits, Campus Connect, Student Clubs, and the Facilitator Enablement Program.
Share your campus or education experience
Have you organized or attended a Campus Connect event? Run a WordPress club at your university? Mentored students through WP Credits? Your real-world experience is genuinely valuable. Sharing it at the table can help shape programs that work better for students and educators globally.
Brainstorm and discuss
Some of the best contributions start as conversations. Bring your ideas for how to grow WordPress in academic communities, support facilitators, or make these programs more accessible globally.
Helpful resources for contributors
Getting familiar with these resources before Contributor Day can help you hit the ground running:
Anyone interested in the intersection of WordPress and education is welcome, including:
Students looking to learn about WordPress and open-source contribution
Teachers and professors who want to bring WordPress into their classrooms
WordPress MeetupMeetupMeetup groups are locally-organized groups that get together for face-to-face events on a regular basis (commonly once a month). Learn more about Meetups in our Meetup Organizer Handbook. and WordCamp organizers with an interest in campus programs
Community contributors interested in education initiatives
Developers and designers who enjoy mentoring and supporting beginners
You do not need prior contribution experience to join. If youโre curious, thatโs enough.
Things to prepare before Contributor Day
To make your Contributor Day experience as smooth as possible, here are a few things to set up in advance:
Create a WordPress.orgWordPress.orgThe community site where WordPress code is created and shared by the users. This is where you can download the source code for WordPress core, plugins and themes as well as the central location for community conversations and organization. https://wordpress.org/ account if you donโt already have one: register here.
@hiabhaykulkarni is a WordPress contributor and community organizer based in India. He led WordPress Campus Connect Kolhapur 2025, bringing WordPress to four campuses and more than 400 students, and has spoken at and organized multiple WordCamps across India. Abhay is also the co-founder of Jeevonix and an active contributor to WordPress coreCoreCore is the set of software required to run WordPress. The Core Development Team builds WordPress., translations, and plugins.
Destiny Kanno
@piyopiyofox is a Community Education Program ManagerProgram ManagerProgram Managers (formerly Super Deputies) are Program Supporters who can perform extra tasks on WordCamp.org like creating new sites and publishing WordCamps to the schedule. sponsored Automattic based in Tokyo, Japan, where she drives education initiatives across the WordPress project. A two-time Make WordPress Training Team RepTeam RepA Team Rep is a person who represents the Make WordPress team to the rest of the project, make sure issues are raised and addressed as needed, and coordinates cross-team efforts. and active contributor to the Community team, Destiny has been a key enabling force behind WordPress Campus Connect, the Facilitator Enablement Program, and the Leading WordPress Education Programs course on Learn WordPress.
Maciej Pilarski
@gomp is a Community WranglerWranglerSomeone, usually a person part of event organizing team, who looks after certain things like budget or sponsors. at Automattic who has been contributing to WordPress since 2014. Based in Okinawa, Japan, he co-organized local meetupsMeetupMeetup groups are locally-organized groups that get together for face-to-face events on a regular basis (commonly once a month). Learn more about Meetups in our Meetup Organizer Handbook. and WordCamps across Poland before moving to Asia, and is a certified WordPress Credits mentorEvent SupporterEvent Supporter (formerly Mentor) is someone who has already organised a WordCamp and has time to meet with their assigned mentee every 2 weeks, they talk over where they should be in their timeline, help them to identify their issues, and also identify solutions for their issues.. Maciej actively promotes WordPress Credits and Campus Connect as pathways for connecting academia with the global open-source ecosystem.
Join us in Mumbai
Whether youโre new to contributing or a long-time WordPress community member, weโd love to see you at the Education table on Contributor Day.
Come learn, share, and help shape how WordPress connects with students and educators around the world.