
Full-Stack Software Engineer
PrairieLearn (Remote US)PrairieLearn (Remote US) — Full-Stack Software Engineer — TypeScript / Postgres / React / AI
PrairieLearn (https://www.prairielearn.com) is an open-source assessment platform used by universities across the US (Berkeley, Princeton, Michigan, Illinois, and others). We power mastery-based learning and large-scale exams.
We’re a small, profitable, early-stage company (bootstrapped, no VC) that is growing quickly. Our users love us and we have very high retention and rapid spread through word of mouth. As an early-stage hire, you’ll work across the stack and enjoy meaningful ownership from day one.
Tech we use: Node.js / TypeScript backend, Postgres, AWS, React. We’re also developing AI tooling, including LLM agents to help instructors create content, and vision-language models to help grade student work. PrairieLearn is open core: https://github.com/PrairieLearn/PrairieLearn
Details:
- Location: Remote (US only)
- Salary: $100k-$180k depending on experience
- Benefits: Stock options (0.5% - 1.5%), unlimited PTO, flexible hours
- Role: Full-time. (We’re not able to sponsor visas at this time.)
Apply at https://www.prairielearn.com/jobs-ashby?utm_source=YeEJ5MAKk...
Opens the company's application page
Listed via
hackernews_hiring
Similar roles
Design & Tech
Related reads from TCHNX

The Quiet Revolution in Local-First Software
As major platforms face outages and data breaches, a new generation of developers is building applications that prioritise local data storage and peer-to-peer sync, challenging the cloud-first orthodoxy that's dominated tech for two decades.

The Quiet Revolution in Edge AI: Why Your Next Computer Might Not Need the Cloud
As neural processing units become standard in consumer devices, we're witnessing a fundamental shift in how AI applications work. Local processing is no longer a fallback; it's becoming the preferred architecture.

The Rise of AI-Assisted Code Generation 2: Are Developers Becoming Prompt Engineers?
As AI coding assistants reshape software development, the industry grapples with a fundamental question: is writing code giving way to writing prompts? We examine how London's tech scene is adapting to this seismic shift.


