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getoffmyus
I've struggled my whole life with lateness and disorganization. I am often in trouble with employers & I'm often in fear of losing my job. I RARELY have any complaints about the quality of my work, but at some point for my bosses, my problems obscure all the good work I do. It seems that my lateness is ALL employers end up focusing on. Luckily I've been able to escape before losing any job, but unfortunately, I've had to leave some jobs that I LOVED.
I'm sick of it. Lately, I have a harder and harder time climbing my way out of periods of depression after repeated failures. I am beginning to think that in order to avoid disappointing employers, I should work for myself, perhaps freelance. With 8 yrs of experience in disaster prevention planning & urban planning, including research & writing, I have the ability. However, time management, organization, motivation (read, laziness) is a HUGE problem for those of us w/ ADD.
Any advice on how I could work for myself & avoid ADD pitfalls?
Answer
Having done freelance writing myself, I don't think it's a good road to go down. I had a very hard time staying focused on tasks and beating deadlines and I don't have ADD. To freelance, you need to be super-organized; keep books in order, report income to the IRS, keep logs of time spent on the computer, pursue jobs... the list goes on.
A thought-- why not get a job on your feet and freelance on the side? ADD isn't really an issue if you're working in a fast paced job. You could get a job at Starbucks, for instance, work enough hours to get health benefits, and freelance in your time off. Or hire someone to handle the business aspect while you handle the writing.
If you have your heart set on freelancing, start with elance.com, creativemoonlighter.com, and sologig.com.
Having done freelance writing myself, I don't think it's a good road to go down. I had a very hard time staying focused on tasks and beating deadlines and I don't have ADD. To freelance, you need to be super-organized; keep books in order, report income to the IRS, keep logs of time spent on the computer, pursue jobs... the list goes on.
A thought-- why not get a job on your feet and freelance on the side? ADD isn't really an issue if you're working in a fast paced job. You could get a job at Starbucks, for instance, work enough hours to get health benefits, and freelance in your time off. Or hire someone to handle the business aspect while you handle the writing.
If you have your heart set on freelancing, start with elance.com, creativemoonlighter.com, and sologig.com.
Do I need college classes to learn web design?
Kim
I'm getting a degree in Urban Planning and I want to also learn web development so I can create social networks based on transportation/urban planning projects. Should I take classes on web development and, if so, what would those classes be named usually?
Basically: where do I start?
Answer
Most colleges are not even current in web design. They are so out of touch with current coding that all you'll learn are bad habits in coding. Easier to pick apart templates and see how they look coded. Validate the templates at the w3c.0rg's css/html validators and learn to correct the errors. Maybe even make your own pages and test it locally in your browser.
CSS Tutorials:
http://www.handycss.com/
http://www.w3schools.com/Css/default.asp
http://www.csstutorial.net/
http://www.echoecho.com/css.htm
http://www.html.net/tutorials/css/
Why Validate?: http://validator.w3.org/docs/why.html
CSS Validator: http://jigsaw.w3.org/css-validator/
HTML Validator: http://validator.w3.org/#validate_by_uri+with_options
How to Make a Webpage:
Full Web Building Tutorials: http://www.w3schools.com/
The Web Book (free): http://www.the-web-book.com/index.php
Most colleges are not even current in web design. They are so out of touch with current coding that all you'll learn are bad habits in coding. Easier to pick apart templates and see how they look coded. Validate the templates at the w3c.0rg's css/html validators and learn to correct the errors. Maybe even make your own pages and test it locally in your browser.
CSS Tutorials:
http://www.handycss.com/
http://www.w3schools.com/Css/default.asp
http://www.csstutorial.net/
http://www.echoecho.com/css.htm
http://www.html.net/tutorials/css/
Why Validate?: http://validator.w3.org/docs/why.html
CSS Validator: http://jigsaw.w3.org/css-validator/
HTML Validator: http://validator.w3.org/#validate_by_uri+with_options
How to Make a Webpage:
Full Web Building Tutorials: http://www.w3schools.com/
The Web Book (free): http://www.the-web-book.com/index.php
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