Hey, no, I have build a website with free mathematics resources for university students.
I am getting good traffic and now I am looking for monetization options that would be non-invasive to the project (for example. I don't want crappy, non-relevant adds).
I also studied CS on polish university and I feel we had the best of both worlds:
Initial programming courses were electives, where you could choose between more basic or more advanced "intro to programming" course. Basic had python, while advanced had c and c++.
Similarly logic classes were in basic and advanced groups and it was easy to choose the group you want and switch groups during course.
In fact, I was the guy who came for CS degree after never doing great at math or CS in high school and it reaaaaaally helped me to get up to speed with the others.
I am a polish native speaker and only after I have met my french-speaking girlfriend, I realized how insanelly difficult my language is, for all the reasons you have mentioned.
There is so much comments about whether the proposal is good or bad. But for me, without making usability tests, there is just no way to know if it's better.
For me proposal for redesign without any experimental data presented is just an invitation to endless speculation.
It's funny how my experience is exactly reverse. Since I joined startup I learn much less, since we can't afford experimentation and there are no other front end devs here, so I don't get a chance to learn backend stuff, since someone has to do front end part.
I also hoped to learn some business stuff, but most of it happens behind closed doors between founders and investors while you code boring crud application.
This is said so often and yet for me personally gym helps only very temporarily - just after workout I feel great, but the next day anxiety might kick-in again.
What would be your advice for older (25+) people who want to get into science? Is it even possible? Or should I just accept that the train has left and focus on something else? Can you develop your math/logic/critical thinking skills at that point?
How about if you never excelled at these topics in school? Is hard work enough, or do you think some people are born with these talents?
https://realnotcomplex.com