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What I Wish I Knew Before Studying IT

When I first started studying IT, I thought the path was straightforward: learn the material, pass exams, and you’ve learnt the skill. What I didn’t realize is that understanding concepts in class is only a small part of what actually matters in the real world.

I took this photo during a Linux class. The proverb was always displayed by the professor before class started.

That realization didn’t start with my IT studies. It actually began earlier during my time studying Mass Communication. While the program focused on digital media and content, I found myself curious about how websites were built and managed. That curiosity led me to start learning web development on my own, using online resources and hands-on practice to build real skills outside the classroom.

 

How I Got Started with Web Development Without a Tech Background

Before I ever studied IT, I didn’t see myself as a technical person. My background was in Mass Communication, where most of my focus was on digital media and content. But while working with online content, I kept wondering how websites were actually built and managed behind the scenes.

That curiosity is what led me to create my first-ever website.

It wasn’t anything complex, just a simple page built using basic XHTML and CSS. But it was the first time I moved from just consuming content to actually creating something. I remember experimenting with layouts, changing colors, and trying to understand why things looked the way they did in the browser. At the same time, I was also using the platform to share my creative writing, publishing fictional stories and personal pieces, which made the process feel more real and engaging.

At the time, I didn’t have a structured roadmap. I was learning by watching tutorials, reading online guides, and testing things out on my own. I started working with WordPress and other content management systems, which helped me understand how websites are built, managed, and deployed.

What made the biggest difference was the trial-and-error process. I broke things constantly. Layouts wouldn’t align, styles wouldn’t apply, and sometimes the page just wouldn’t load the way I expected. But each mistake forced me to search, learn, and try again.

Looking back, building that first website changed how I approached learning. It showed me that real understanding doesn’t come from just reading or watching, it comes from doing. That mindset stayed with me and later shaped how I approached IT, especially when working with systems, networks, and troubleshooting.

It didn’t start as a career plan. It started with curiosity, and that curiosity ended up shaping everything that came after.