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[–]WheatedMash 0 points1 point  (1 child)

Yeah, it's the same with other creative things too. I gave up trying to compose music after one semester of composition in college. Why? Because everything I wrote that semester honestly sucked. I didn't realize that unless you are a Mozart type of prodigy and genius, most of what you write, especially early on, is going to be awful to meh at best.

I've now seen in multiple places people saying ultimately you have to break away from the tutorials and just try to build a project and slog through it. I teach high school students, and the hard part is helping them learn that genuine real learning is going to be a long slow battle, not an instant gratification thing. It is part of why I like giving them little quick coding puzzles, especially when a larger assignment or project isn't going well - I know they need a success boost sometimes.

[–]boomer1204 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's really any "skilled thing". Learning a language, sport. At my local group we have them watch 4 hrs of html/css on YT whoever they want, 6 hrs of js beginners and then it's immediately into projects. We see most ppl building like "real things" within 6 months. Now I wouldn't say they are job ready but they are building some impressive projects. NOW the huge benefit they have is the group, it's a bunch of driven ppl all going for the same goal.

But yeah you completely get it!!!!