GitHub is the communication tool for Data Scientists and developers. As students, you will want to curate your creative work on GitHub using Git. GitHub is the place to share your original work, not your homework assignments. Many people store their personal websites, blogs, and project websites on GitHub. Our textbook and course are hosted on GitHub, and you can see J. Hathaway’s or Ryan Hafen’s personal Data Science websites that are hosted on GitHub as well. You will be making your public resume that will be hosted on GitHub for this project.
In the process of this project, we will be learning the process of Git and the tools of GitHub. We will use the Git process to have others in our class to edit our resumes. Take the process seriously (pick a suitable username and write a good resume), and you will have the beginning of your social presence in the DS/CS space.
Completed Readings: GitHub, a programmer’s social media, Join GitHub, Repository Templates, Using Version Control in VS Code, Working with GitHub in VS Code, Git in Visual Studio Code video, New to Git and GitHub? This Essential Beginners Guide is for you, Git vs. GitHub: What is the difference between them?
Grand Questions
- Join the BYUI Data Science Resumes GitHub organization and use the template repository to make a resume repository under your repositories. A good name might be LASTNAME-Resume.
- Clone your repository to your computer and build a first draft of your resume.
- Push your results to GitHub and have another student fork your repository to make edits.
- Accept the proposed changes from the student review and finish your final version.
- Make sure your resume is forked by BYU-I Data Science Resumes