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Sidney
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If he is good at HTML CSS and JS without prompting he already has a knack for it. If he wants to sharpen his skills why not point him to CodeEval or even our own (CodeGolf)[http://codegolf.stackexchange.com/] section? By completing these challenges, he will get a feel for whatever language he picks up, and if he picks up multiple all the better (coding languages are like human languages after all, the more you know, the easier it is to learn the next one).

If he's the extensive reading type, you might grab some required readings from a CS101 class at your nearest university. If he can already program then these won't be over his head and may even interest him.

If he is good at HTML CSS and JS without prompting he already has a knack for it. If he wants to sharpen his skills why not point him to CodeEval or even our own (CodeGolf)[http://codegolf.stackexchange.com/] section? By completing these challenges, he will get a feel for whatever language he picks up, and if he picks up multiple all the better (coding languages are like human languages after all, the more you know, the easier it is to learn the next one).

If he's the extensive reading type, you might grab some required readings from a CS101 class at your nearest university. If he can already program then these won't be over his head and may even interest him.

If he is good at HTML CSS and JS without prompting he already has a knack for it. If he wants to sharpen his skills why not point him to CodeEval? By completing these challenges, he will get a feel for whatever language he picks up, and if he picks up multiple all the better (coding languages are like human languages after all, the more you know, the easier it is to learn the next one).

If he's the extensive reading type, you might grab some required readings from a CS101 class at your nearest university. If he can already program then these won't be over his head and may even interest him.

Source Link
Sidney
  • 191
  • 3

If he is good at HTML CSS and JS without prompting he already has a knack for it. If he wants to sharpen his skills why not point him to CodeEval or even our own (CodeGolf)[http://codegolf.stackexchange.com/] section? By completing these challenges, he will get a feel for whatever language he picks up, and if he picks up multiple all the better (coding languages are like human languages after all, the more you know, the easier it is to learn the next one).

If he's the extensive reading type, you might grab some required readings from a CS101 class at your nearest university. If he can already program then these won't be over his head and may even interest him.