Thanks for the suggestion, I'm aware of this resource but it's not what I'm looking for -- for example, it recommends SICP and Berkeley's 61A lectures for learning programming.
I'm very familiar with both resources -- the former is how I learned to code, and I actually took the second class in person at Berkeley. But I have a math background, and mostly don't have math trauma anymore
This is for a person with math trauma who dropped out in middle school. The goal is to get her comfortable with the ideas and methods of CS, at least enough that she'll eventually be ready to tackle deeper resources like those one day if she wants to. I think introducing those at this stage would be overwhelming and disheartening.
I do like those resources for folks with more traditional backgrounds and preparation though
I'm very familiar with both resources -- the former is how I learned to code, and I actually took the second class in person at Berkeley. But I have a math background, and mostly don't have math trauma anymore
This is for a person with math trauma who dropped out in middle school. The goal is to get her comfortable with the ideas and methods of CS, at least enough that she'll eventually be ready to tackle deeper resources like those one day if she wants to. I think introducing those at this stage would be overwhelming and disheartening.
I do like those resources for folks with more traditional backgrounds and preparation though