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Dan7492020-04-21 08:31:19
IT education
Dan749, 2020-04-21 08:31:19

Will the courses speed up my learning?

I want to become an android developer and my question is whether I should take big courses like those offered by skillbox or geekbrains, will it speed up my learning and will it be of any use. Now I'm studying javarush, I have one course on android development on udemy, as well as a couple of downloaded from torrent and a couple of development books, but despite the abundance of courses there is much less information than on the same skillbox for 20 months, moreover there's a lot of practice there.

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4 answer(s)
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approximate solution, 2020-04-21
@approximate_solution

I'll tell you a little secret. It's 2020 and you have access to an endless database of learning materials. The only negative is that it has a lot of water and informational noise (the courses that you threw off). Your task, as a programmer, is to teach your brains to structure information and filter out unnecessary things. What you are told on the course in 40 minutes (timing of one lesson), in the book they give 3-4 sheets of compressed information, without water. The programmer must be able to work with technical literature, documentation.
It is worth paying money for courses only when these courses are accredited by some corporation like Ocacle or Microsoft, that is, they give a profit (or gave a profit) when applying for a job, they were a kind of portfolio for a system engineer, developer.
Use books, YouTube, a reference book - start making a pet project right away. Don't be fooled by marketing that is designed for monkeys.
Algorithm: take the training program from the courses above - and learn from it, on YouTube (especially on foreign channels, and they lick information from there).

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Andrew, 2020-04-21
@freiman

Will the courses speed up? Yes, they will speed up. Explain complex things and pitfalls, give direction.
Is it possible to learn everything without courses? Yes, you can. As already mentioned, there is no fundamentally new information in the courses - it already exists in books, the Internet, etc. But there is less motivation, more cones, in general, it is more difficult to learn.
The crusts from the courses themselves do little.
It is necessary to apply the knowledge gained in the courses. Do you want to become an android developer? Download a simple application in parallel with studying at the courses - this will be the result of your learning, which can be shown at interviews.

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Ronald McDonald, 2020-04-21
@Zoominger

The only benefit that courses bring is income for their creators. They do not provide any sensible knowledge, any good base.

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DanielMcRon, 2020-04-21
@DanielMcRon

Courses ... If you find good ones, which are units for each subject and they are already, as a rule, of high quality and well presented, then for a beginner you can look at them. At the expense of Geek Brains, it's dumb, as there are suspicions about him.
When you get the logic of how to work with the tool in the courses, start reading books from beginner, intermediate level to more advanced.
Also, practice and the desire to do something will give a lot of experience. Since you will be looking for something on the Internet to solve a specific problem and at the same time you will learn new things.
And again, for each direction there are a maximum of 2 good courses, but no more. Then comes the cheating and stealing money.

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