Documentation and Reflection
Why Documentation Matters
Your project is impressive. But if no one knows what it does, how you built it, or what you learned, a lot of that value is invisible. Documentation makes your work visible and permanent.
Three audiences for your documentation:
- Future you: In six months, you'll forget the details. Good documentation means you can pick up where you left off.
- Others who see your work: College admissions officers, potential employers, friends, family. They need context to appreciate what you built.
- Other builders: Your process might help someone else tackling a similar project. Share what worked and what didn't.
Writing Your Project Summary
Use the Project Summary Template (downloadable below). It covers:
- The What: What did you build? One paragraph describing your project, its purpose, and its target audience.
- The Why: What problem does it solve? Why did you choose this project?
- The How: What tools and techniques did you use? How did AI assist you? What was your process?
- The Journey: What challenges did you face? What changed from your original plan? What surprised you?
- The Lessons: What did you learn about building? About AI? About yourself?
- The Link: Your live project URL.
This summary is portfolio-ready. It's the kind of document that impresses college admissions officers, scholarship committees, and future employers. It shows you can plan, execute, and reflect — skills that matter far beyond this course.
Documenting for a Portfolio or College Application
If you want to include this project in a portfolio or application, emphasize:
- The problem you identified and chose to solve (shows initiative and awareness)
- Your process: planning, building, testing, iterating (shows discipline and methodology)
- Specific challenges and how you overcame them (shows resilience and problem-solving)
- What you learned about responsible building (shows ethical awareness)
- The fact that you shipped a real, working project (shows execution ability)
Don't undersell what you've done. You identified a problem, planned a solution, learned new tools, built something real, deployed it, got feedback, iterated, and considered ethics. That's a complete product development cycle. Many adults haven't done this.
Documentation Template
Download the template to write your portfolio-ready project summary:
- Project Summary Template (PDF) — Structure for The What, Why, How, Journey, Lessons, and Link
You can also find this and all other resources on the Dashboard Resources page.
Key Concepts
- Documentation makes your work visible to future you, admissions officers, employers, and other builders.
- Your project summary covers: what, why, how, journey, lessons, and live link.
- For portfolios: emphasize initiative, process, problem-solving, ethics, and execution.
- You completed a full product development cycle. That's genuinely impressive.
Project Checkpoint — Deliverable!
Complete your Project Summary using the template.
- All sections filled in (What, Why, How, Journey, Lessons, Link)
- Written in your own voice
- Proofread for clarity and typos
- Saved as a standalone document you can share
Level Up: Coming Next
Lesson 7.4 — What's Next. The final lesson. Reflect on what you've learned, where these skills take you, and write a letter to your future self.
Continue to Lesson 7.4 →