Get Comfortable Learning On Your Own With Khalal Walker

Get Comfortable Learning On Your Own With Khalal Walker

Khalal's first language was Java, he learned his it in school. He didn't like coding in school because all they did was learn algorithms and data structures. How many people have completely turned away from this amazing career where you get to build cool things like dad jokes in text messages simply because classes get structured around data structures, algorithms, and Java?

New coders should take a step back before jumping straight to a Bootcamp. Take time to learn on your own to make sure this is what you want to do or what you want to invest in. You'll still be doing a lot of self-lead learning anyway when attending a Bootcamp.

Try to find people who went to the Bootcamp. Don't look on websites like Course Report where almost every Bootcamp is five stars. Get on LinkedIn and find developers who graduated the Bootcamp and talk to them, you'll get honest insights.

ISAs are the only option for most people to attend Bootcamps. You have to be coming from a place of privilege to pay the 18-20 thousand dollars upfront. So instead they'll take 20% of your income for two years. You get a job for $100,000, and now, you have an $18,000 Bootcamp that just went up to $50,000. You got $50,000 worth of debt in 13 weeks. That's what people may get after a year or two of college, or three or four depending on where you go.

Transcript

"Get Comfortable Learning On Your Own With Khalal Walker" Transcript

Quotes

Joel:

"what sort of habits have you developed or you think are important if you want to break into this field, and do it and kind of in a sustainable way?"

Khalal:

"You literally just can't give up or quit. And that sounds like the most cliche thing ever. But it's literally so important, because you're going to hit walls. You're going to struggle. I think, the biggest thing with being a developer is just banging your head against your keyboard for eight hours of the day. And the last hour, you just see the light and you just keep finding different ways until something works."

Khalal:

"So, I take that with learning how to code. In the beginning, you're going to mess up on syntax. You're going to forget a semi-colon. You're going to miss a quote. And some of these things may really, really bother you. But if you keep at it, these things will become second nature. And then, you'll have new struggles. Because when you have new successes, you move on to new problems."

Khalal:

"And so, as long as you know that in this industry, it's always... Things are going to get easier, but you're always going to be learning something new. You're always going to be learning. You're always going to be growing and you just have to have the willingness to take on that challenge every single day."

Khalal WalkerJoel Hooks

Avsnitt(77)

Personal Growth From Open-Source And Meetups With Monica Powell

Personal Growth From Open-Source And Meetups With Monica Powell

Monica Powell didn't have the most straightforward path to her first job as a developer. She took a couple of years of graphic design in college, took a computer science class, joined a student-led we...

19 Dec 201937min

Test Driven Accessibility with Erin Doyle

Test Driven Accessibility with Erin Doyle

At first, React looked like it might have been a fad, and JSX seemed weird. But, it didn't take long for people to see the power and beauty of it. React makes reuse easy, which makes accessibility a l...

17 Dec 201938min

Writing The Book On Data Visualization With Amelia Wattenberger

Writing The Book On Data Visualization With Amelia Wattenberger

D3.js is the defacto library that people use to create custom data visualizations on the web today. It's powerful and flexible. You can do whatever you want with it. However, that kind of power and fl...

11 Dec 201935min

Making A Fulfilling Career Out Of Multiple Interests With Hiro Nishimura

Making A Fulfilling Career Out Of Multiple Interests With Hiro Nishimura

Hiro started coding HTML and CSS back in middle school so she could make internet friends and talk about anime. She never thought of coding as anything more than a hobby, and she stopped when she bega...

1 Nov 201935min

Out With The 10x Developer And In With The 10x Mentor With Tracy Lee

Out With The 10x Developer And In With The 10x Mentor With Tracy Lee

Making technical decisions for your business when you don't have experience as a developer is difficult. It's scary to make decisions that you don't know the consequences of.Tracy got into development...

17 Sep 201930min

Build Performant And Reliable Applications With Molly Struve

Build Performant And Reliable Applications With Molly Struve

To executives, new features mean more money, but even if you had terrific features, they wouldn't be worth a thing if they only worked half the time. Reliability isn't something you want to put off un...

6 Sep 201931min

Learn To Debug Properly And Ask Better Questions With Justin Samuels

Learn To Debug Properly And Ask Better Questions With Justin Samuels

How many of us still almost exclusively use console.log() when trying to debug something? It's okay, plenty of us do it that way, but you could be saving yourself a lot of pain and suffering by using ...

30 Aug 201931min

Populärt inom Business & ekonomi

framgangspodden
varvet
badfluence
rss-jossan-nina
rss-borsens-finest
avanzapodden
svd-tech-brief
rss-svart-marknad
uppgang-och-fall
fill-or-kill
rss-dagen-med-di
borsmorgon
kapitalet-en-podd-om-ekonomi
affarsvarlden
rss-kort-lang-analyspodden-fran-di
tabberaset
lastbilspodden
24fragor
bathina-en-podcast
borslunch-2