Would You Write Real-World Problem Scenarios for Juniors?

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Asked By ChillDeveloper92 On

I'm building a platform where experienced developers can share real-world inspired engineering challenges, similar to Jira tickets. The goal is for juniors or career switchers to tackle these scenarios asynchronously at their own pace. Unlike traditional tutorial platforms, this initiative will focus on problems that developers actually encounter. Additionally, there will be a compensation model for those who create and publish these scenarios. I'm really interested in hearing from senior developers: Would you spend 30 minutes a week contributing these tickets? What would motivate you to do so? Would the potential to earn money influence your decision, or would a reputation or ranking system be more appealing? Would you track how well others solve your challenges, and what might make you stop participating after a couple of weeks? Your honest thoughts would be greatly appreciated, especially on how to encourage experienced devs to get involved.

5 Answers

Answered By SkepticalDev On

Most so-called 'real' problems are just tedious and don't add much value from a learning perspective. They can often be constrained by budgets or company policies, and aren’t really a 'problem' until they bubble up in communication issues.

Answered By TechGuruX On

Honestly, I wouldn't dedicate time to this for free. If there's a pay system for reviews or feedback, then maybe I'd reconsider. There needs to be a solid mutual benefit for both the ticket creator and the juniors.

Answered By CreativeCoder77 On

I think real-world problems can often be too complex to summarize simply. Many require extensive context to really understand. Adding synthetic context could help, but it might complicate things more than necessary.

Answered By ProblemSolver22 On

Can you give specific examples of the types of problems you're targeting? For instance, something like designing a retry and idempotency strategy for a payment gateway issue seems practical. It’d be cool if users could pay for feedback on their solutions!

Answered By JuniorDev123 On

If this is just about memorizing trivia or solving brain teasers, then I don’t see the point. Junior developers need to learn critical thinking skills, not just drill on development trivia.

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