When a code bootcamp has surprisingly good hiring statistics and you’re trying to figure out why, then find the buried ledepic.twitter.com/LWSJPb7bjA
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When a code bootcamp has surprisingly good hiring statistics and you’re trying to figure out why, then find the buried ledepic.twitter.com/LWSJPb7bjA
“Of the 15% that graduated, 86% got a job” in other words ~12.5% of paying students land a job. Subject line of the email? “86% of [school] students land jobs!”
Not trying to be difficult but isn't that the correct metric. How does a school take placement responsibility for someone who drops out or fails to graduate?
What I will admit to is that I wouldn't join a school where only 15% graduate. There's definitely something amiss.
it's not obvious to me what's wrong with that, other than the shady (borderline grifter) economics of the school taking their money regardless of the outcome. I'm not under the impression that 100% of people who attempt to learn programming will succeed at it.
what's a reasonable upper limit to expect people to successfully learn a bootcamp curriculum? I really don't know because there's so many variables but if it's > 50% I'd be surprised.
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