(4) John Lauerman, The New Anti-College.
www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/ ... ho-want-better-jobs
Quote:
"The [80 coding ('80' according to 'The bottom line' at the end of this article] schools took in a combined $59 million in revenue, or about $9,833 per student, estimates Course Report co-founder Liz Eggleston. * * * A 12-week boot camp at Hack Reactor in San Francisco costs $17,780; that’s $1,482 a week, about the same as a week’s worth of tuition at Harvard. The cost covers an 11-hour, six-day-a-week program
"Six months after finishing, 59 percent report a salary increase, averaging $23,000 annually, according to SwitchUp, another rating site.
Note:
(a) summary underneath the title in print: Pricey coding classes are attracting college grads who want better jobs
(b) summary in Table of Contents: Oh, sure, Harvard’s great, but where’d you go to coding camp?
(c) The “anti-college” is modeled after “antichrist,” antithesis.
(d)
(i) "Dev Bootcamp, now owned by Kaplan, the SAT-prep and education company, was founded in San Francisco by a former Microsoft engineer"
Founded in 2012, Dev Bootcamp offers a 19-week course.
(ii) "General Assembly started as a co-working space in New York’s Flatiron district in 2011 and evolved into boot camps"
General Assembly (based in New York City. 8-12 weeks)
(iii) Hack Reactor (founded in 2012; based in San Francisco; 12 weeks)
(e) "Fifteen stories above Wall Street [in Manhattan], students in Dev’s open-plan office break only for lunch and occasional snacks"
open plan
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_plan
("floor plan")
(f) "Vivek Ratkalkar, 26, a Pace University communications graduate"
Pace University
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pace_University
(private; founded by Pace brothers in 1906
(g) "Anna Taberski, an alumna of Dev’s New York school who now codes for Web designer Blenderbox. She graduated in 2012 from the University of California at Berkeley, which has a top-ranked computer-science program, but she found the programming classes there forbidding. Instead of comp sci, she majored in comp lit."
"Instead of comp[uter] sci[ence], she majored in comp[arative] lit[erature]."
How do I know the latter? Well, "comp lit" is not common knowledge. I know, because the print has photos of four people mentioned in this article, underlain with their major and alma mater, as well as which coding boot camp they are attending or attended. For Ms Taberski, the caption says “comparative literature,” not “comp lit.”
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