・
Reviews 8
・
Average rating 5.0
In conclusion, the lecture is really, really good! It may be different for everyone, but for someone like me who finished the 5-month national publishing course and didn't get a single interview call for over 2 months, that's how it is.. In the national course I took, I learned HTML and CSS for a week and then moved on to JavaScript. It was difficult at first, but I gradually got used to it. I can make sliders in JavaScript without libraries, so I'm pretty good at JavaScript for a new publisher. (I can't help it because I focused on JavaScript for almost 4 months...) But that's all. When I was trying to get a job as a publisher and create a personal homepage, I didn't know anything about HTML and CSS publishing. I had no experience and was at a loss. I found out later that the instructor was a developer, so he was weak in publishing, so he taught JavaScript right away and focused on that. What good is it if someone who wants to get a job as a publisher only knows a little bit about JavaScript? HTML CSS publishing is no different from being a beginner.. To be honest, from my experience, I think HTML CSS publishing skills are the most important. One thing to add is that when I was taking the national fund publishing course, the students asked if we were going to make our own homepages in the last month, and the instructor said that we would make them ourselves after the course. Since it was our first time, we couldn't compare ourselves to other instructors, so we just thought it was like that. When I tried to make my own homepage after the course, I was so overwhelmed, but now I feel a lot less overwhelmed. Thank you!!!
As mhlyu63 said, HTML and CSS publishing skills are the top priority for getting a job as a publisher. Although I say this, I think it would be better to think of the past time as a time of experience to make things better. As the lecture video says, try to do it with the mindset of 'Now is the beginning'. Fighting!