Everyone's a beginner at some time in their career, whether it's when you are in school, in a boot camp, a postdoctoral program, or as an experienced developer learning a new technology.
Learn with us!
Over the past summer, Azure Advocates and Project Managers have been hard at work creating lessons and tutorials for beginners around the world who want to become professional web developers. We launched several beginner video series, and now, in the same vein, we have created a curriculum that you can access completely free of charge to take your first steps with JavaScript, CSS, and HTML, the building blocks of the web.
Here on the Academic Team in Azure Advocacy, we have partnered with colleagues across our large department of educators, advocates, managers and content creators to create for you 24 lessons spanning 12 weeks that you can take either in full or in part, at your leisure from the safety of your own home. They are freely open to be used as you like, via GitHub. Teachers, you can use this content within GitHub Classroom!
Meet the team!
Pedagogy
What's pedagogy? It's the way you teach, what underlying values inform your teaching style and choices.
We have chosen two pedagogical tenets while building this curriculum: ensuring that it is project-based and that it includes frequent quizzes. By the end of this series, students will have built a typing game, a virtual terrarium, a 'green' browser extension, a 'space invaders' type game, and a business-type banking app, and will have learned the basics of JavaScript, HTML, and CSS along with the modern toolchain of today's web developer.
What about non-English speaking learners? We are working to translate this curriculum to several languages, so please stay tuned!
Curriculum Structure
Each of the 24 lesson includes:
- optional sketchnote
- optional supplemental video
- pre-lesson warmup quiz
- written lesson
- for project-based lessons, step-by-step guides on how to build the project
- knowledge checks
- a challenge
- supplemental reading
- assignment
- post-lesson quiz
By ensuring that the content aligns with projects, the process is made more engaging for students and retention of concepts will be augmented. We also wrote several starter lessons in JavaScript basics to introduce concepts, paired with video from the "Beginners Series to: JavaScript" collection of video tutorials, some of whose authors contributed to this curriculum.
In addition, a low-stakes quiz before a class sets the intention of the student towards learning a topic, while a second quiz after class ensures further retention. This curriculum was designed to be flexible and fun and can be taken in whole or in part. The projects start small and become increasingly complex by the end of the 12 week cycle.
While we have purposefully avoided introducing JavaScript frameworks so as to focus on the basic skills needed as a web developer before adopting a framework, a good next step to completing this curriculum would be learning about Node.js via another collection of videos: "Beginner Series to: Node.js".
Whether you're a student or a teacher, we welcome your feedback! The issues are open on the repos for you!
Special thanks to Floor Drees, Christopher Harrison, Chris Noring, Yohan Lasorsa, Jasmine Greenaway, and Tomomi Imura for their work on this curriculum!
Top comments (22)
π , Nice initiative by Microsoft for Beginner Web Developers, Thanks all for the hard work. Small feedback: Text based tutorials are easy to follow than videos. But I can see the tutorials are in
Github repo
, it would be easy to follow if you could move the content fromGithub repo
toMicrosoft Learn page
, so that the learners can track their progress and move forward. This is how freecodecamp.org and educative.io does.hi, thank you for the feedback! For the moment, you can use this repo with GitHub Classroom, and probably in the near future these tutorials will indeed end up as a learning path on Microsoft Learn :)
hello thanks a lot, how can I add that repo wit GitHub Classroom??
hi, if you look here github.com/microsoft/Web-Dev-For-B... there are some instructions. You will need to fork the whole repo and then rearrange each lesson into its own repo on your own GitHub account. After that, you can create assignments via GitHub Classroom linked to a repo. Let me know how it goes!
This looks like a great initiative Jen. Well done to all those involved. ππ»
Thank you!
Pls the Github repo link
it's at the bottom of the page: github.com/microsoft/Web-Dev-For-B...
Ma
How re we going to start taking class because don't understand
This is self-driven content; you can fork the repo and work through the included lessons. Take a look, see if it makes sense. The table of contents is in the base README file; lessons are linked there.
Okay ma thank u very much
A few additions!
Quizzes have been moved to their own app so you can take them more easily
We now support at lest seven languages due to community translation efforts! Japanese and Korean in particular are fully complete, with Hindi and Italian coming along very well! Please stay tuned and consider supporting our translation efforts!
NΓΆice
This is great Jen!
Great initiative, congratulations MSFT Dev Team!
Thank you for this! I'm really excited to start!
The quizzes don't load. Am I missing something?
I messed up the links when converting to docsify. Should be restored now, sorry
How to submit the assignments??
Itβs a self study course but stay tuned for office hours online