
From HTML and CSS to your first deployed project, with JavaScript, React, and Next.js along the way. Built for beginners who want to write real pages, not only watch tutorials.
You start with structure, styling, and behaviour on the open web, then move into responsive layouts, components in React, and how Next.js packages that for production sites. WordPress appears because many marketing teams still live there next to custom code. By the end you have a live URL, not just exercises on disk. Expect to type a lot and to keep practising between mentor sessions.
People who want to understand how websites work and be able to build them from scratch.
Self-taught learners who have covered the basics but want structure, JavaScript, and a framework.
UI/UX designers who want to read, understand, and contribute to frontend code alongside developers.
Organised into modules that build on each other. The content is structured, not arbitrary.
The same categories of tools you will see in junior frontend roles, tied to what you ship each week.
Extensions, integrated terminal, and debugging, the editor most frontend workflows standardise on.
Branches, commits, and pull requests so your progress is reviewable and shareable.
Branches, commits, and pull requests so your progress is reviewable and shareable.
Semantic structure, accessible patterns, forms, and documents that mean something to browsers and users.
Flexbox, Grid, responsive rules, and typography so layouts behave on real devices.
DOM, events, and fetching data, the layer that turns documents into interactive applications.
Inspect layout, watch the network, and step through scripts until behaviour matches intent.
Components, props, state, and routing, the baseline for interactive UIs in modern teams.
App Router, layouts, and server/client boundaries, the production React framework used for most new marketing sites and web apps.
Block editor, themes, and plugins, the CMS baseline for countless content and marketing sites, often next to custom code.
HTTPS, previews, and production deploys for static, React, and Next.js projects.
Core tooling is free-tier friendly. You can complete the track without buying paid licences; optional upgrades are your choice.
Not self-paced video content. A structured programme with real outputs and structured feedback.
Each module ends with a deliverable, not a quiz. You practise by making things, not memorising definitions.
HTML → CSS → JavaScript → React and Next.js, then WordPress and deployment, each step assumes the previous one.
You finish with a deployed project you own, something you can share with employers and continue building after the track.
Realistic, honest expectations. The track gives you foundation and practice. What you do with it determines what comes next.
A deployed web project you built during the track
Confidence with HTML, CSS, JavaScript, React, Next.js fundamentals, and WordPress as a common CMS path
Understanding of responsive design and how the web actually works
Foundation for junior frontend developer and web developer roles
Track-specific answers: prior knowledge needed, what you build, tools used, and how to get started.
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