Fullstack!
It's official, I'm going to attend Fullstack Academy in January!
It's hard to know of course if this is the right decision. After all this is a ton of money to throw down to learn something that is technically available for free, but at the moment it feels like the right thing to do. Some things I'm super excited for:
Awesome Teaching! My interview with Fullstack was much more like a lesson than an interview. Sure I tried to show off what I knew, but really I got a glimpse of what it might be like to attend. We went over a few concepts I've written about here on the blog before in a way that felt comfortable but still pushed me to understand it better than I did before--which is exactly what I'm looking for. Sure I can read about recursion or whatever on my own, but with great teaching I can read about something, and then talk with a teacher to understand it even better. Maybe I can write some crappy code on my own but how do you learn the best ways to write something without some real teaching?
ACTUALLY BUILDING THINGS. I love that Fullstack has real world projects that their students create, they seem pretty portfolio focused which is exactly what you want from a bootcamp. I'm a little tired of silly meaningless tutorials, and itching to make something of value.
FASTER PACE! So I think I've made good progress on my own. But if it's just me here alone in a room...it feels pretty slow. But it seems like this program is going to basically be 24/7 programming which is both scary and super exciting. And unlike a lot of the other bootcamps I saw out there it's more geared towards amateurs rather than beginner-beginners, which I think is more where I'm at right now.
Javascript!? At first I wasn't sure on this one. I assumed ruby/rails were the way to go here, but Fullstack makes a good case for why it's both the thing to know at the moment but also the thing for amateurs to master first. I also suspect that I'm not that far from understanding rails on my own, and I've got my pal Histocrat here to help me fill in the gaps. When I look at the curriculum at Fullstack, it's jam packed with awesomeness, which both sets me apart from other "junior developers" but also lends itself to other technologies (the best I can tell anyway). When I look at a lot of the other bootcamps out there in this city that I had my eye on, it seems like a lot of repetition of what I've already been trying to learn over the past few months.
Community and Networking! Even if I could get my butt down to focus (which honestly I know I can do), I'm can be pretty darn shy. I'm not good at tooting my own horn. I'm not always great at networking. Without a pal to go with me, I'm not one to go to free community events. When put under pressure and put in the right context, however, I can actually be a pretty good people person. This seems like that kind of context, I love that their students go to Hackathons (and actually win a few?). I love the way they have a targeted hiring day that seems not just focused on getting as many companies into the room as possible, but about making the right matches between students and organizations. They also teach you a little Agile and stuff which seems good for helping with culture fit.
Foundations! I just glimpsed at some of their prep work and I'm so pumped! It seems like they actually support you through it, rather than just send you a bunch of links.
Well, only time can tell of course if this whole experience will be really worth it, but at the moment I'm super hopeful and determined to make the absolute best of this choice by learning as much as I can over the next few months. Wish me luck and I'll keep y'all posted!












