More than 100,000 freeCodeCamp.org graduates have gotten jobs at tech companies including:
freeCodeCamp is a non-profit educational organization that consists of an interactive learning web platform, an online community forum, chat rooms, online publications and local organizations that intend to make learning software development accessible to anyone.
Beginning with tutorials that introduce students to HTML, CSS, and JavaScript, students progress to project assignments that they complete either alone or in pairs.
Before founding freeCodeCamp, Quincy Larson was a school director for six years before he started to learn to code so that he could create tools for making schools more efficient.[5] His own journey into learning to code was long and winding[6] and he recognized the need for a single-track curriculum for new developers. Upon analyzing data on coding boot camps in the US and realizing how inaccessible coding education was,[7] he set out to create a fully-online inclusive free platform for peer-driven learning of coding — the result of which is freeCodeCamp. He currently lives in Texas with his family and spends his time working on freeCodeCamp, writing and interviewing authors for the freeCodeCamp publication, co-ordinating open source projects such as Chapter (a free and open-source Meetup alternative),[8] advocating for a free and open internet[9] and playing with his two young kids.
Some members of the freeCodeCamp team (from left to right): Miya, Mrugesh, Quincy, Kris, Ahmad
Thank you from the freeCodeCamp.org team.