Earlier today Kristen Schofield posted about a new curriculum available for learning ColdFusion. The curriculum consists of two PDFs (not sure if code is included, didn't see it) and the coverage appears to be quite intensive. I'm a bit puzzled by some of the choices in regard to what is considered advanced (lists are advanced?) but there is a large amount of material here - and all 100% free. You can go directly to the materials here:
http://www.adobe.com/education/instruction/teach/cfcurriculum.html
To be clear, this is not just for students. Anyone can download the PDF and start learning immediately. (One quick note for Mac users. Don't try to open the PDFs using Preview. You have to use Reader to view them.)
Comment 1 written by Phillip Senn on 18 March 2009, at 4:55 PM
http://www.adobe.com/go/cfcurriculum
which is a broken link.
Comment 2 written by dave on 18 March 2009, at 5:11 PM
Comment 3 written by Raymond Camden on 18 March 2009, at 5:22 PM
Comment 4 written by Kay Smoljak on 18 March 2009, at 11:22 PM
Comment 5 written by MAQ. on 19 March 2009, at 5:09 AM
http://www.adobe.com/go/cfcurriculum
is not working
MAQ.
Comment 6 written by Steve Drucker on 19 March 2009, at 5:17 AM
While lists, arrays, and structures are obviously not "advanced", the concepts needed to be covered in the Advanced curriculum since they are not covered in the 3-day intro course and the entire curriculum must flow together to some extent. Adobe (and other training partners) insisted that the courses could not be longer than 3 days in length which ultimately determined what topics got covered as well as the level of detail. Most instructors find it quite challenging to make it through the entire Advanced course within the 24 hours allotted. For example, we actually had two additional units that were written but got cut due to time restrictions -- a pretty good (IMHO) introduction to XML/XSLT and everything you never wanted to know about Flash Forms.
We also wanted to introduce CFEclipse into the course instead of using DW, but that idea was also nixed since the intro course taught DW and it didn't make a lot of sense to hit students with two different IDE's if they were taking the courses back-to-back. We did add a CFEclipse tutorial in our Moving to ColdFusion 8 course, however, and cover another 7 days of material through our AJAX and CF, Moving to CF, and Administering CF courses.
Comment 7 written by Raymond Camden on 19 March 2009, at 6:28 AM
@Steve: Thanks for some background on this. I can see how covering everything under the sun would be a great challenge.
This may be kind of a dumb question - but can people like me use the docs to teach students? If I wanted to start teaching again (in my spare time), would I be allowed to charge people and use this as the curriculum?
Comment 8 written by Amal on 19 March 2009, at 6:44 AM
Comment 9 written by Patrick on 19 March 2009, at 7:06 AM
Comment 10 written by Josh on 19 March 2009, at 11:02 AM
Comment 11 written by Nathanael Waite on 19 March 2009, at 11:21 AM
Comment 12 written by Patrick on 19 March 2009, at 11:55 AM
I downloaded the complete package which did have Unit 10, but it is located after Unit 1 and before 2 (because its alphabetically)
Comment 13 written by Phillip Senn on 19 March 2009, at 5:39 PM
It comes down to demand. If you show a coordinator that there is a demand for it, they will schedule a class.
Just remember that it will take a long time because decisions are made on a semester basis; sometimes yearly.
Comment 14 written by Edward Beckett on 19 March 2009, at 6:22 PM
Adobe "should" give you some liberty seeing that you helped write their books ...
However ...
Comment 15 written by Raymond Camden on 19 March 2009, at 7:48 PM
Comment 16 written by Bob on 20 March 2009, at 6:17 AM
I've found in my experience though that such a wind range of students take my class: everything from students, continuing ed, seniors, and more, that creating material that everyone can get through in the time allotted is challenging.
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