A couple of comments..
1. This list is not for job hunting. Learn how to post correctly on email lists. In this instance, you need an OT (Off Topic) at the start of your subject line as this is a list for asking technical questions about Django. More people will want to help you if you respect the purpose of each email list you post on.
2. No one will sign in to Google drive to see your resume. It should be readable on your web site in both plain text and pdf (NOT downloads).
3. Never tell a prospective employer that you hate something ("...and just hates Front-end ."). Always tell them what you have accomplished, what you are good at and what you enjoy doing. Always be open minded about learning new things/technologies/etc until you have a lot more experience, many more accomplishments, and at least a hint of gray hair. ;)
4. If you are going to post the code you wrote, then you better be sure it is golden. functions.php has no comments, poor style, and I have no idea what it does. Not the code I want to have in my products. Learn how to write code that others can easily support, then post that code to your web site so others will be impressed. There are all sorts of style guides for php, python, java, etc. Learn them and apply them to the code you publish for others to see (actually all your code).
5. Not sure what all these courses are listed on your site. Did you take them? If so, then they should be in your resume and not here. If you are just trolling the web for content, don't make me guess what it is and don't make me look at them. You are making yourself look very undesirable as a candidate for an internship by just adding fluff to your github account. Get rid of it. If you are just starting out and don't have a lot of projects, that is OK. Showing me one project where you really excelled (eg see #4) is far better than a lot of poorly done projects with irrelevant fluff surrounding them.
Good luck!
Mark