Deferred tuition coding bootcamp model should be a textbook example of moral hazard/adverse selection.
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Replying to @akarp
disagree, given the burden of tuition which kicks in whenever you hit 6 figures or whatever the ISA number is, you have an incentive to take a FAANG job and get it out of the way before inflation ratchets it up
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Replying to @jaengelman
I highly doubt that any of the coding boot camps can make a difference in whether someone gets hired by FAANG.
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Replying to @akarp
I agree that's true of most bootcamps, but the ones that give people enough technical skills to think they have a better shot at a startup than a big company might. Interested in
@AustenAllred 's thoughts on this, given you're addressing his business model.2 replies 0 retweets 0 likes -
Replying to @jaengelman @AustenAllred
Well, let’s parse what exactly it means to give people technical skills.
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On one hand we have people who are smart and driven. They would be “ideal students”. Unfortunately they are exactly the ones who have the least to gain from a bootcamp.
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That’s simply not true. Self learning is possible but it’s really, really hard, and many of the brightest students come in with such bad habits from K-12 that while capable you have to first and foremost teach them to learn
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