FAQ
Straight answers. No marketing fluff. If you still have questions after this, use the Support page.
No. It is structured training aligned with real production workflow and delivery standards. You’re trained to ship, not to “watch videos”.
To build practical skill and discipline: fundamentals, workflow, real projects, and measurable output that can stand in a professional environment.
Yes — but only for serious beginners. If you’re looking for shortcuts, you’ll struggle because the foundation is taught properly.
Yes. Many intermediates join to fix fundamentals, learn structured workflow, and build production-grade projects instead of random demos.
Git discipline, structured tasks, clear deliverables, code review mindset, deadlines, documentation habits, and clean handover standards.
The main track includes: Web Fundamentals (HTML/CSS/JS), Frontend UI implementation, WordPress design/building, PHP, WordPress theme dev, WordPress plugin dev, Laravel backend systems, and systems/workflow automation.
Not as the first priority. We start with fundamentals and real UI engineering. If you can’t build clean interfaces with plain HTML/CSS/JS, you will build messy React apps too. Frameworks come after foundation.
Properly. Structure-first building, performance, security basics, and later engineering (themes/plugins). Page builders are tools — not excuses.
Yes. PHP fundamentals first, then Laravel backend systems with real architecture thinking, database discipline, and production habits.
The system is assessment-heavy. Most evaluation is continuous: tasks, submissions, reviews, projects, and checkpoints. Your output is the proof.
Yes — but it’s evidence-based. Certificates are issued based on completion standards and verified submissions, not attendance.
It’s not a university degree. It’s a professional completion certificate with verifiable proof of work. Employers care more about your portfolio and competence.
There can be a placement path for top performers, but it is not automatic. You must earn it by performance and reliability.
No. Employment consideration is for top performers who meet internal standards. Most people will only leave with skills and portfolio.
Participation is mandatory if you want results. If you don’t show up, you fall behind, fail assessments, and you won’t be certified.
It depends on the cohort structure. The key is that you’ll still be assessed based on deliverables, not vibes.
A laptop, stable internet, and discipline. If you don’t have time and consistency, don’t register.
Not for fundamentals and web work. A reasonable laptop works. If you later do heavier tooling, you can upgrade.
If recordings exist for a cohort, they are meant as support — not as a replacement for participation and submissions.
Not as the default. The academy is structured training. Extra mentorship can exist only where explicitly announced.
Expect practical assignments weekly and checkpoints. If you don’t like assignments, don’t join — that’s the whole point.
Yes. No submissions, no progression. This is output-based training.
Yes. The capstone is where you prove you can build and deliver a complete system with proper workflow and structure.
The track is sequential. If you skip fundamentals, you will be punished later by harder modules.
Depends on policy for that cohort. Usually, late entry is discouraged because you miss foundations and assessment context.
You lose points, fall behind, and can be disqualified from certification/placement consideration depending on how serious it gets.
No, but you must be ready to practice. If you don’t practice, you won’t improve.
Yes. Real projects and structured submissions are the backbone. If you’re not building, you’re not learning.
Yes. The entire structure is portfolio-driven. You graduate with work you can show — not empty claims.
Some cohorts may require screening. If screening exists, it’s to filter for seriousness and basic readiness.
No. Copied work kills your learning and wastes everyone’s time. It can lead to disqualification.
Use AI as support, not as replacement. If you submit AI-generated work you don’t understand, you will fail reviews and assessments.
There can be, depending on cohort structure. But you will still be judged individually by your contributions and reliability.
Yes, where applicable. Review culture is part of the training — writing, structuring, and improving your work based on feedback.
Through continuous assessment: tasks, projects, submissions, and reliability. Some cohorts may publish rubrics for transparency.
Performance standards apply. If you consistently fail submissions, you can be held back or disqualified from certification.
Depends on the cohort plan and schedule. The point is not the calendar — it’s whether you complete the work and meet standards.
There’s structure and deadlines. If you want fully self-paced, this isn’t that. Structure is part of the value.
A code editor, Git, browser devtools, databases, and frameworks as needed. The exact tool list can be shared per module.
Yes. MySQL/PostgreSQL fundamentals, data discipline, basic ERD thinking, and how backend systems actually store and fetch data.
You’ll learn the basics relevant to your track and projects. Production readiness matters, but we don’t turn this into a DevOps bootcamp.
Not as the core focus. The academy is mainly web + systems + workflow. Other tracks may be introduced later.
Yes. You can join strictly for skills and portfolio. Employment consideration is optional and performance-based.
Refund terms depend on the cohort policy. If refunds are allowed, they are time-bound and process-bound. Read the Terms page.
Support is provided through the academy channels and support tickets where applicable. But you’re still expected to be independent and responsible.
Yes. But you’re expected to attempt first. We don’t reward laziness.
Not necessarily. Most of the core tools are free. If a paid tool is ever needed, it will be clearly communicated with alternatives.
Use the Support page. Where tickets are enabled, submit a support ticket with clear details and screenshots.
No. Public pages are accessible. You only need an account to enroll, access learner content, or use student tools.
Start from the Home page, review the track and expectations, then proceed to Courses and apply/enroll based on the cohort instructions.
Tip: If you’re not ready to practice consistently and submit work, don’t waste your money. This program rewards discipline.