Your First Week in WordPress: A Simple Practice Plan (Pages, Posts, Blocks & Menus)

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Welcome to your WordPress sandbox

This site is intentionally minimal so you can focus on learning the core building blocks of WordPress: pages, posts, blocks, media, and navigation. Use the plan below as a low-pressure checklist—by the end of the week you’ll have edited real content and understand how the pieces fit together.

Day 1: Get oriented (Dashboard, Pages, and the editor)

  • Open Pages and preview Home, About, Resources, and Contact.
  • Edit one page and add a Heading block and a Button block.
  • Use the List View to see how blocks are nested.

Day 2: Learn blocks (structure beats perfection)

Blocks are the “LEGO pieces” of WordPress. Start with a few essentials and practice moving them around.

  • Create a simple section using Group + Columns.
  • Add an Image block and write a clear alt text description.
  • Try Quote and Separator blocks to improve readability.

Day 3: Posts vs. pages (and why both matter)

Pages are timeless (About, Contact). Posts are timely and organized (Blog). A good practice exercise is to write one short post that teaches something you just learned—like this one.

If you can explain a WordPress feature in your own words, you understand it well enough to use it.

Day 4: Menus and navigation (make your site easy to explore)

  • Check your header navigation and confirm it links to Home, About, Blog, Resources, and Contact.
  • Add one new page (draft is fine) and practice adding/removing it from the menu.
  • Preview on mobile to see how the menu behaves.

Day 5: Media and accessibility basics

Practice uploading an image, setting alt text, and keeping file sizes reasonable. Accessibility is a habit: descriptive links, clear headings, and meaningful alt text help everyone.

Day 6–7: A mini project to tie it together

Create a “Resources” section that includes:

  • A short intro paragraph
  • 3–5 helpful links (use descriptive link text)
  • A call-to-action button to your Contact page

When you’re done, review your work by previewing the site and clicking through it like a first-time visitor. You’ll quickly spot what needs simplifying.