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Lift-off: The MDN Curriculum launch

Lift-off: The MDN Curriculum launch

Today marks an exciting day for web education! The MDN Curriculum is now available on MDN, providing an important tool for those learning front-end development and also for those teaching it. In this article, we'll review the journey that led us up to this point, talk about the curriculum's key features and how to use it, and give you a sneak peek into the potential next steps.

How did we get here? A brief recap

Last August, we announced our plans to create a front-end web developer curriculum aimed at improving the state of web education. In particular, we wanted to address the problems highlighted in our discussions with web developers and educators through community conversations and more formal research. These problems included:

We decided to focus on creating a high-level curriculum – a single resource that lists all the fundamental and supplementary topics that front-end developers should learn about, along with trusted resources to get started on each of these topics.

Key features of the MDN Curriculum

To begin with, it's important to note that the curriculum will always be freely accessible. We believe in the world wide web — anyone should be able to take advantage of this resource for learning, regardless of geography, age, disability, or any other personal circumstances.

It is a curriculum in the academic sense of the word — it doesn't contain its own in-depth course material but instead lists all the topics we think you should know to succeed as a front-end web developer. There are a lot of high-quality resources already available for learning web development (including MDN!). Each module in the curriculum contains links to trusted key articles, videos, and other resources, to help beginners get started with learning each of the listed topics.

The curriculum is divided into three distinct module groups:

How to use the MDN Curriculum

Our curriculum is useful to two main groups, students and educators.

Students can use our topic lists as a structured roadmap that outlines what they should learn and the order of topics they should follow. Using this guide can not only ensure their skill set is current, but can also help them in identifying any gaps in their knowledge. This is applicable to both individuals new to the tech industry pursuing a related qualification and existing web (or non-web) developers aiming to "level up" their skills.

Students should go forth and learn the topics outlined in our modules either via self-study, by enrolling in a course or boot camp, or by using a combination of these methods. Either way, upon completing a conforming course, students should be able to pass an examination that tests their understanding of the topics they have studied.

Educators can use our curriculum as a blueprint when creating programs, units, and assessment specifications for a web-related university degree, college course, coding school course, or similar. Conforming to the curriculum will help ensure that courses teach current techniques and best practices and avoid bad practices and out-of-date information.

We regard the "Core" modules as essential for any student to learn or any course to include. The "Getting started" modules are not essential, but we strongly encourage students and educators to include these on their learning agenda. For example, it is very useful to understand the environment you intend to use to build websites. In addition, students should develop their soft skills such as teamwork, problem-solving, research, and communication. These skills are useful for succeeding in job interviews and for succeeding in the job itself.

The "Extension" modules should supplement the "Core", to suit whatever specialization students may want to pursue once they've mastered the essentials. For example, you might want to head down more of a UI design path, steer towards information security (InfoSec), or see yourself as a pure JavaScript developer.

Next steps

With the MDN Curriculum launched, we are planning to explore several potential next steps:

Go check it out!

We hope you find the MDN Curriculum useful in your front-end development journey! Please check it out. You're welcome to share your feedback in the curriculum content repository.

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