My Journey into Web Development
My first introduction to coding came in high school. I took classes in JavaScript and Visual Basic. I also taught myself HTML and CSS by building and designing the make-your-own websites (such as Angelfire, Xanga, and Geocities) that were popular at the time.
In college, I decided to focus on business and, after college, went to work in the fashion industry for eight years. Over that time, I saw the industry shift and change, becoming increasingly more focused on e-commerce and digital services. For two years, I ran the e-commerce website at the handbag company for which I worked. In the process, I had the opportunity to assist in a full site redesign. As I was working with the developers and recommending features, it dawned on me that I was much more interested in the work the developers were doing than the work I was doing. I wanted to be the developer. I had always enjoyed the problem-solving aspects of coding and working on the site redesign re-inspired that interest in me.
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Over the next few months, I took online courses in HTML, CSS, and Ruby. I realized that I was spending all of my free time working on code and thoroughly enjoying it! I reached out to people in my network and discussed options for pivoting my career into tech and it was suggested to me to look into coding bootcamps. After much research, I landed at the Flatiron School, an intense, immersive coding bootcamp. For three months, I worked harder than I have ever worked. We covered a tremendous amount of information including, but not limited to:
- Ruby (Sinatra and Rails)
- JavaScript/JQuery
- Ember.js
- HTML/CSS
- SQL (SQLlite3, Postgresql)
My ‘aha!’ moment came when I realized that I was spending roughly 15 hours a day coding (in class, working on projects, etc.) and was so excited to come back do it all again the next day.
Upon graduating from Flatiron, I entered the workforce as a freelancer and Ruby/JavaScript/HTML/CSS tutor. In November 2016, I accepted a full-time position as a web developer at a creative agency. This position pivoted me once again into learning PHP/Codeigniter and WordPress development.
I am currently working for the University of Rochester, developing in PHP, WordPress and Drupal.