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Review 1

Average rating 5.0

Completed 86% of course

I am writing this in case it will be helpful for those who are learning HTML/CSS for the first time like me. This is how I started the course and used it. I am currently about to start the final project for the paid part, and I will take the final project again in a few days due to personal reasons. (I am really bad at writing... so it may not be helpful.) My conditions 1. Major, but no experience in web development or UI/UX management, mostly worked on other projects 2. No languages I am particularly good at -> In fact, I am close to being a non-major, but I became interested in front-end development, so I thought, "HTML/CSS is the basics! Then, I should learn JavaScript!" and looked for any lecture to get my head around it, but the instructor's voice was so good that I signed up for this course without getting bored at all. I actually don't know which lectures are good because I didn't listen to the lectures diligently throughout college. I will tell you about the parts that I experienced through trial and error. All my thoughts are subjective based on my experience. They are not absolute. 1. At the beginning of the course, the instructor said that the lecture was fast, so I stopped in the middle of the class and followed the code. But I think it's not a good method. I'm in a hurry to follow along. 2. I tried to understand everything. But this method wasn't good for me either. There are countless functions in HTML/CSS, and it was too much to understand. So what did I do? 1. Until the end of one section (meaning a section that combines several lectures such as HTML for placement and CSS for decoration), I watched the video at 0.95x speed, understood the flow, and listened to what functions there were as if I was taking an offline class rather than an online lecture. 2. After that, when one section ended, I went back to the beginning of the lecture material and followed the practice. While following, I thought, "Oh, this is what they said at that time, this function was used like this, Oh, this is how it works," and practiced and organized it in my head. 3. But people can't understand everything just by watching it once and following it once, so when I was following along and thought, "Oh, how did they do it?", I replayed the lecture and looked for the relevant part, and looked up other people's opinions through official documents or Googling. 4. Even if you do this, it won't be perfect. Learning isn't something that can be organized in one or two times, so it's important to keep using it and applying it. I ask the instructor. In fact, one of the reasons I decided to just watch the whole lecture once was because of the mouse pointer and the instructor's demonstrative pronouns. When the mouse pointer is displayed as a pink circle, I can follow it well, but when it's not, I sometimes miss what the demonstrative pronouns are referring to. I'm very grateful for providing high-quality lectures at a low price. I know it's harder than you think, but if you could be a little more specific when giving instructions, it would be more helpful. I recommend this to these people. 1. Those who want to listen to lectures like college lectures and study separately, and want an environment where they can watch the lectures again when they get stuck (studying separately is practice. Like an assignment) 2. Those who want to receive a systematic HTML/CSS curriculum for beginners (I really liked the lecture order as I listened) 3. Those who want to receive HTML/CSS codes by picking out only the necessary parts and listen to explanations for understanding (It may sound a bit strange, but to put it simply, there was no part of the lecture that I thought was useless) I recommend this to these people. 1. People who don't like fast pace (As the instructor said, if the fast pace doesn't suit you, you can't listen. Listen to the free part and decide.) 2. People who want the lecture itself to teach everything (The lecture speed is slow and the class volume is long, but I think there will be lectures where you go through it slowly with the students one by one. However, in my personal opinion, if you don't develop the habit of doing it yourself and the habit of thinking hard even if you experience trial and error, you won't survive in the field of coding. It's a field that you have to study for your whole life.) It's a bad article and written based on personal opinion, but I hope this course review will be helpful to someone.

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yalco
Instructor

Thank you, chichi, for leaving such a valuable review. You explained in great detail what parts were difficult and what needed to be improved from the student's perspective, which was a great help in preparing and supplementing the lecture. I will refer to what you said and apply it to future lectures, and if the results are good, I will remake the entire lecture. Thank you again!! If there are any difficult parts during the final project, please feel free to ask me any questions.

Properly Selling HTML CSS - by Yalco thumbnail
yalco

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54 lectures

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2,959 students

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Properly Selling HTML CSS - by Yalco thumbnail
yalco

·

54 lectures

·

2,959 students