Hi! I was an engineering intern at Google this year and I love programming.
I usually have two teaching approaches:
1- I like teaching with live examples so you would usually have a small project done after every session or a large one that spans over several ones.
2- If that's not your cup of tea, another approach is to have a theoretical session, I'll give you an assignment and we'll correc...
Hi! I was an engineering intern at Google this year and I love programming.
I usually have two teaching approaches:
1- I like teaching with live examples so you would usually have a small project done after every session or a large one that spans over several ones.
2- If that's not your cup of tea, another approach is to have a theoretical session, I'll give you an assignment and we'll correct it in the next one. Combining several assignments results in a great large project you can add to your portfolio. That's the most effective way to learn in my opinion but it requires a bit of effort :)
I have been teaching for around 2 years and these methods have been really effective.
If you have an interview soon, I can conduct mock interviews after you specify the difficulty level you're interested in being asked about.
If you're interested in learning about electronics and microcontrollers, I can teach you how to make some cool projects on Arduino for example.
Even more, if you really don't like programming but have to learn it for your school or college course, I've got you covered. I have some tips and tricks that can help you easily pass with little effort.
All in all, if you're interested in learning anything about code or electronics, I can probably teach it so don't hesitate to ask.
I'm a cool person (I think) and I will probably make a few bad jokes while explaining but I think it's worth it.