Coding Check-In: How I Improved Functionality on ConnectVA

Coding, Tuesday Tips

Crooked Pool Coding Tuesday Tips

When I attended a week long development bootcamp earlier this year, which was really a career orientation program, I knew I might be doomed when the icebreaker activity was a math problem. I’ve never considered myself a “math person”. I do, however, like learning new languages, and I took really well to learning basic French in high school. Learning HTML/CSS feels more like learning a new language than it does solving complex math. I know that will change should I choose to learn complex programming, but for now, I’m in my comfort zone.

When you’re learning a new language, you can gain a lot from reading the language, so in this case, reading the code. Reading code is how I’ve taught myself new tricks thus far. I may not be to the point of being able to mock a website from scratch, but I can problem-solve. For example, a few of the pages on ConnectVA had a lot of long, bulleted content. So I figured out how to apply the accordion code we were using on another page to the rest of the resource pages to make the content more organized and easier to read.

Nonprofit Technology Tools on ConnectVA

At that bootcamp I attended, the lesson of the math question wasn’t to test our arithmetic skills, but rather to teach us the value of Googling something when we don’t know the answer. Googling is how I learned how to add anchors to organize FAQ pages:

Using Anchors on ConnectVA

Having real-life problems to solve at my day job has really helped me grow my coding skills in a practical way.

Three Writers I Admire

Tuesday Tips, Writing

Writing- Three Writers I Admire

1. Alexandra Franzen

If I lived in Portland, I’d be attending Alexandra’s workshops and eating at her SO’s restaurant ALL THE TIME. She is the master of succinct, engaging, emotionally impactful writing. She pretty much represents everything I want out of a career and of life. If you aspire to freelance write, or just want some creative inspiration, subscribe to her e-mails and download her e-books.

2. Jewel

An unconventional choice, to be sure, but Jewel’s lyrics and poetry have influenced me tremendously. In my college poetry classes, Jewel’s A Night Without Armor was a compass that I would follow when I needed direction. I know “Pieces of You” by heart, and her songs are on the soundtrack of all of the important chapters of my life.

3. Miranda July

I recently listened to The First Bad Man on audio on the road from Virginia to Florida to participate in my sister’s wedding. It is by far her best work to date. July is also a filmmaker and artist. Her first film, Me and You and Everyone We Know is in my top three movies (along with the Star Wars saga and The Hours). Her stories are bewildering and intense, but her characters are my kindred spirits.


I haven’t been inspired to write creatively for a long while. The old spark seems to be gone. I keep waiting for some cataclysmic event to kick-start my creative endeavors again. I’m not sure what or when it will be. These days, when I force myself to write, the experience feels less cathartic than it used to.

3 “Cool Tools” I’m Loving Right Now

Cool Tools, Tuesday Tips

The Crooked Pool Cool Tools- I'm Loving Right Now

Instapaper

 

 

 

 

I just learned about Instapaper. I haven’t really started using it yet, but I know it will come in handy during the work day. Instapaper allows you to save and curate news and other media so that you can digest it later. It will also read the article out loud to you – great for when you’re on the go. Download the app on Apple or Google Play. I love PopSugar’s coverage of great apps to enhance your digital life.

Snapchat

 

 

 

 

Snapchat. I know Snapchat isn’t new – especially to Gen Z (which is DIFFERENT FROM BEING A GEN Y MILLENNIAL – STOP GETTING US CONFUSED EVERY MEDIA OUTLET AND CONSULTANT EVER THANK YOU!!!). Being a  Gen Y Millennial, which means I was born somewhere between 1980-1995ish, I love and am pretty adaptive to new technology. However, it’s getting to the point where I’m really having to spend time studying new social media tools and trends without just inherently understanding them. Snapchat is a perfect example of something that I was like “I don’t get why this is cool” – but I’m starting to get the hang of it now, and there are TONS of brands already using it effectively. I’m excited to see how this impacts the nonprofit world that I work and play in.

Piktochart

 

 

 

 

Piktochart. If you’ve ever looked at those fancy/cool infographics and said to yourself: “I wish I had graphic design skills so I could make one of those.” Never fear – Piktochart is here! (In case you didn’t know, I’m an awesome poet – hence the cheesy rhyme). Piktochart (which is mostly free – you can upgrade for more features of course), makes it easy for you to design an infographic with their pre-made templates. If you’re familiar with Canva (and if you’re not, you should get all up in some Canva right now!), or any other web-based design or photo editing software, you’ll have no problem with Piktochart. I just made one for work, and I’m not shy to say that it turned out AWESOME. I can’t show it to you yet since we haven’t shared in on our channels yet, but stay tuned next week!

(Whew, I use parenthetical emphasis a lot!)

Cool Tools is just one of many topics I cover on Tuesday Tidbits – where I gush (or brag about) my favorite social media or digital tools at the moment.