7
ctnqhk
2y

My do-over would be going to a different coding bootcamp. I wonder if I could be making more money if I went to a better school.

The one I did go to was a big scam. They were more obsessed with teaching you to pretend rather than teaching how to code. They pulled the wool over everyone’s eyes—the students, the volunteers, the donors, the community. They were very cult-like with mantras like “trust the process.”

I spent 9 months there, but I felt I was a year behind. I am not misspeaking. I would have to relearn basic concepts the right way because they taught them half assed or not at all. I didn’t realize I was behind until I went to interviews and bombed. Seriously, I learned more in a 40 hour free library coding class than I learned in 9 months at the school. Most of the interviews I was getting were for unpaid internships. The school was telling me to go for mid level roles.

I found out recently that they’re breaking the law by operating without a license. In my state code schools do need a license. There are screenshots going around of a letter from the education department. They’re defense is “they’re not a school.” They’re still open. I think ppl should be warned away, but there’s only so much I can do. And I know ppl will give this place the benefit of the doubt before taking any student accusations seriously.

The biggest red flag is they want students to pay up to 70k and bind them to payments for 8 years. I say it’s a red flag because this place is operating as a nonprofit. Shouldn’t a nonprofit not be charging 3-4x more than competitors? They’re definitely not going to give you 70k worth of services.

They really just exploit the poor and POC by signing them up for debt and knowing those ppl would not be able to pay even with a 100k job. They have a very poor understanding about how poverty works.

It had MLM/pyramid scheme vibes when they started making recruiting students a game. They give out tickets to their annual fundraiser or promote you on social media if you refer the most students to them.

I’m one of the lucky ones who was studying coding before I started at the school. Also, job searching is mostly luck, so I was lucky at that too. But I still had to take a job that paid below market. I still wonder what would happen if I went someplace else.

I don’t even put this place on my resume or LinkedIn. Even without these problems, it’s not like anyone would have heard of the place anyway.

No this place isn’t Lambda or Holberton school.

Comments
  • 0
    Addendum. That 70k price tag went into effect after I finished.
  • 4
    Bootcamp culture is founded on scams.
  • 0
    @lbfalvy Very true. I feel like the one I went to is really exploiting the nonprofit label. It’s like ppl think nonprofits really have good intentions. Um, no. The CEO just wants to be paid for going to parties “to fundraise”.
  • 0
    @lbfalvy Totally! I can’t take these ads that promise “learn to code in 4 months and get a big salary” seriously. It doesn’t work that way
  • 0
    I agree with you. Although my boot camp wasn’t that bad. They didn’t really teach us backend like they said “full stack developers” my ass. Inlearned more from a Udemy course in 3 hours on SQL than I did in there. Like I didn’t know a single query. I knew what a database was. But man. They didn’t help with careers or anything like they said they would. And now I’m back in retail still looking for my entry level job in a city where entry level is 3+ years experience.
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