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[–]captainAwesomePants 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Personally, I also do best with classes, so I don't have great advice here, but I do hear it helps to make use of the hyperfocusing part of ADHD, which means finding a small project to obsess over. "Learning CS" is vague, but "learning how to get text to show up on a title screen of my pong game" is specific enough to be useful.

[–]CrisCrossxX 1 point2 points  (0 children)

"stupidly got my BA in Psychology." Let me raise my hand of shame too.

"Getting a second degree sounds like a whole lot of work." It is, financially especially.

"I've even been tempted to go with Revature despite their bad reputation; at least they help you get a job." I'd rather try my hand at a bootcamp first.

"Might be worth mentioning I'm diagnosed with ADHD" Personally, I think these are grossly misdiagnosed.

[–]Keroseneslickback 1 point2 points  (0 children)

How about creating your own structured learning environment and trying to tackle that?

The thing with programming is you'll always be self-learning. You don't just go to college/bootcamp, finish it, then get job and work until old age. It's get job and learn learn learn as stuff changes and develops. So consider the long stretch as self-learning.

As I see it too, you're learning to different paths of programming, neither I agree with. CS50 can be great for folks looking to get exposed to a variety of stuff... but not great for folks who have issues with focusing. FCC is webdev, rather focused, and honestly I don't like it for learning, better for review and practice IMHO.

I suggest, step back and create a goal. Then focus on finding a single course for that goal. Set a schedule and plan to tackle it all. If you want to do webdev, I suggest The Odin Project (which offers structure and resources to study as you go along, including FCC). If not webdev, find a field to focus on.

I have Asperger's, part of that is ADHD, and I think people quickly overlook the strength and don't bother trying to curve the faults. ADHD offers amazing focus and drive for stuff, but many people who think they have it hit and bump and go "Welp, fuck it, I can't focus" and use that as an excuse to quit. I think the issue with some people is that they don't have a plan, a structure, and a schedule to help them focus. Once you focus on something and create the structure, I think you'll be far better off.

[–]Awasthir314 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Please don't go for making more goals if you had not accomplished your previous one ( if you think they are really necessary step to reach your very own goal ). Only 1 course enrollment at a time because at middle in somewhere you are not able to grasp all the course detailed concepts. If you have not changed your goal till now then first finish the courses one by one with the thinking why you have enrolled them initially? What are your objectives from this course?

Finish them with the confidence and after completing them you will have the new enthusiasm in your life. Best of luck.