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by drglitch
4151 days ago
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I am also concerned that "learn web dev" is quickly becoming the new "Get MSFT/CSCO/A+ certified in just 3 weeks and make 100K!". While this could be a great way to learn basic skills, its probably not more in-depth than what codeacademy or code.org makes available for free. More specifically, promising employability and calling this a "tuition" carries implied promises and expectations for prospective "students" - expectations that are likely to get shattered the moment any interviewer worth half their salt asks a basic comp sci 101 question. Sorry to be so negative, but the message i see is rather spammy. From the design and overall content perspective, its a really well made site though. |
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I appreciate your feedback and complement on the site design/content perspective.
I totally understand your concerns, and we want to do everything we can to avoid sending the message that this is no more in-depth than codecademy or code.org free tutorials. I urge you to take a look at the curriculum (you can contact us from the footer of the site if you'd like a first hand look) and see for yourself. The time it takes a student to complete the course is up to them, but it is much tougher than material you'll find on sites like those aforementioned. Our course covers HTTP, e-commerce, patterns, and many more intermediate to advanced topics. And, you're not just coding partial pieces of code in the browser like other sites - you're actually building real, production-grade applications on your own servers. I won't crowd this post with all the details as they're all viewable here: https://codermanual.com/track-select/12-week-rails-track/
There's a downloadable e-book at the bottom of that page that describes how to handle both technical interviews and non-technical interviews as well (re: your point about comp sci 101 questions).
Thanks!
Rob