Fwd: why learning to code won't take you 10,000 hours
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Hey,
It's supposed to take 10,000 hours to become an expert at something.
Is that the case with coding? Ken Mazaika from The Firehose Project doesn't think so. In this week's sponsored guest post, Ken breaks down why it won't take you 10,000 hours to learn to code.
Click here to read the sponsored post.
Here are the main takeaways:
- The media has changed the meaning of the rule.
The 10,000 hour rule used to mean it took that long to become an expert in an advanced field. Now it seems to mean it takes that long just to be good at something. - Companies don't hire people based on the hours they've spent learning.
You'll be expected to have some experience in the field, but no hiring company is going to ask you exactly how many hours you've been learning for. - Companies hire new developers as an investment.
They won't expect you to be an expert. They'll expect you to have the ability to figure stuff out and a hunger to learn on the job.
See the full sponsored article here.
Hope you're having a great week so far. =)
Laurence
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