Soon the freeCodeCamp curriculum will be 100% project-driven learning. Instead of a series of coding
challenges, you'll learn through building projects - step by step. Before we get into the details, let
me emphasize: we are not changing the certifications. All 6 certifications will still have the same 5
required projects. We are only changing the optional coding challenges.
After years - years - of pondering these two problems and how to solve them, I slipped, hit my head on
the sink, and when I came to I had a revelation! A vision! A picture in my head! A picture of this! This
is what makes time travel possible: the flux capacitor!
It wasn't as dramatic as Doc's revelation in Back to the Future. It
just occurred to me while I was going for a run. The revelation: the entire curriculum should be a
series of projects. Instead of individual coding challenges, we'll just have projects, each with their
own seamless series of tests. Each test gives you just enough information to figure out how to get it to
pass. (And you can view hints if that isn't enough.)
The entire curriculum should be a series of projects
No more walls of explanatory text. No more walls of tests. Just one
test at a time, as you build up a working project. Over the course of passing thousands of tests, you
build up projects and your own understanding of coding fundamentals. There is no transition between
lessons and projects, because the lessons themselves are baked into projects. And there's plenty of
repetition to help you retain everything because - hey - building projects in real life has plenty of
repetition.
The main design challenge is taking what is currently paragraphs of explanation and instructions and
packing them into a single test description text. Each project will involve dozens of tests like this.
People will be coding the entire time, rather than switching back and forth from "reading mode" to
"coding mode".
Instead of a series of coding challenges, people will be in their code editor passing one test after
another, quickly building up a project. People will get into a real flow state, similar to what they
experience when they build the required projects at the end of each certification. They'll get that
sense of forward progress right from the beginning. And freeCodeCamp will be a much smoother experience.