Northface University - Computer Science in Half the Time? 666
prostoalex writes "Associated Press runs a nationwide story on Northface University. The school, founded by a pair of venture capitalists and former technology chief found a niche with its highly intensive curriculum and corporate software development specialization. For example, a BSCS degree can be completed in a little over 2 years, and it comes with IBM's WebSphere and Microsoft's MCSD certification. Northface is also promoting its corporate partnerships, which allow current students to feel more secure about future employment. Grady Booch from IBM is quoted to be 'jazzed up' about the program, although there are many who oppose such approaches to college education."
Everything will be half (Score:5, Interesting)
Half the money
Half the college experience.
Re:Everything will be half (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Everything will be half (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Everything will be half (Score:5, Insightful)
As for degrees as job qualifications, this is seriously beginning to irk me. On one hand, companies supposedly want the best and brightest employee possible. On the other hand, they shirk the guy who's got the experience, the knowledge, and the proven ability but no degree, for some degreed idiot who doesn't know the first thing about software development.
Of course, these are the same companies that think that more warm bodies == faster development. In their never-ending pursuit for more warm bodies, they've outsourced to more warm bodies in India so that they can get even more warm bodies for the same price! Next they'll cut costs by going for more cold bodies!
Maybe Google will finally teach the business world something about proper engineering. Then again, maybe not.
who cares what companies think? (Score:4, Insightful)
The difference between a trade school and a university is that the university aims to not only equip you with the knowledge to perform in a job, but to make you a better all around person as well through exposure to other studies, people and ideas.
In no other situation in life will you ever get a chance to experience such a fascinating breadth of humanity in such a period of time. Its a sad shame some people see this as a BAD thing.
Re:who cares what companies think? (Score:4, Insightful)
They will all give you fascinating breadth of humanity experiences, but they won't give you the same fascinating breadth of humanity experiences. I went to college, got my degree in CS (BS/CS under the dept of Engineering) and it wasn't until I spent a month in Europe behind the Iron Curtain that I saw how rich the lives of the American 'poor' really are, it wasn't until I saw four generations of family living in the same 1 bedroom apartment (about 800 square feet) that I learned to appreciate my little crap garage apartment that I had all to myself. It wasn't until I saw that night's dinner walk into the butcher's area and get hacked up to pieces with a sharp knife
Re:Everything will be half (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Everything will be half (Score:5, Informative)
At $60,000 for 2 years, it certainly doesn't sound like half the money. A four year degree from the Art Institute of Portland [artinstitute.edu] in game programming or game art is $64,000 for four years. Although the extra couple of years might seem like fluff there is alot to be said for the knowledge and thinking skills that can be obtained during that time.
But that's my $.02
Re:Everything will be half (Score:5, Insightful)
Learning how to program is NOT the same as teaching you how to THINK!
Anyone can learn how to program in any language. I'd rather hire someone that has had a liberal arts degree. I can always teach them Java, ABAP, C++, or whatever. At least with a liberal arts degree, they've learned somehting about thinking and planning and collabaration. They may have even taken some business or finance classes, where they can at least understand that debits are supposed to always equal credits.
Re:Everything will be half (Score:2)
Re:Everything will be half (Score:3, Insightful)
They may have even taken some business or finance classes, where they can at least understand that debits are supposed to always equal credits.
But even our government doesn't understand that.
Re:Everything will be half (Score:2)
I've been wondering for a while now why they have so many free electives without doing certification or hardware courses (you'd be amazed at how ma
Re:Everything will be half (Score:5, Funny)
I really don't think that I could have built up an acceptable level of tolerance to alchohol in only two years. Heck, it took me over five years (but I did get a MS out of it too).
Re:Everything will be half (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Everything will be half (Score:3)
Physics, Calculus, Economics... if you really know your subject prior to going to classes. You'll know most college professors don't know how to teach for shit. They are just there to do research publications to give the school a good name.
Re:Everything will be half (Score:4, Interesting)
The answer to this is, I think, a little more complicated. There are many universities out there which do not grant Ph.D. degrees. My experience has been that students from those colleges, on average, learn more than those students who attend a Ph.D. granting University.
The reason for this is that these colleges tend to attract instructors who are simply not driven to excel in the world of "publish or perish" but prefer to actually teach. I may be biased here: I attend a university with no Ph.D. program and I have a close relative who is a full professor at a non-Ph.D. granting university who left a tenure track position at a prestigious west coast university because she disliked the focus on research and total disregard for undergraduates.
I strongly feel that it is easy to get an excellent undergraduate education, you just have to go to a lesser known university. Of course this advice will likely come back and bite you if you don't go on to graduate school. At some point an employer is going to ask themselves "have I ever heard of this school? Is it accredited?"
Re:Everything will be half (Score:3, Insightful)
-kaplanfx
Re:Everything will be half (Score:5, Funny)
That would be business psych.
Re:Everything will be half (Score:4, Insightful)
You seem to have confused going to college and getting educated, with a vocational training program and certification. Sounds like what you want is a two-year degree.
Re:Everything will be half (Score:5, Informative)
Physics- daily. Of course I work in an embedded field, so I deal with physical hardware every day.
As much as I hated those classes (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:As much as I hated those classes (Score:3, Interesting)
No need to care. If the trend that may be observed here (de) continues, she/he will be too old no matter what the degree looked like. Current standard-barrier is age 35.
CC.
Re:Everything will be half (Score:5, Insightful)
I personally enjoyed my non-major classes every bit as much (in a lot of cases, more) as my CS classes. Hell, the CS classes were largely boring, I already knew a lot of that stuff. The physics, biology, history, etc classes were where I really learned stuff.
Sure, I don't use biology in my job. I do have an actual life though, and friends who sometimes want to talk about things other than computers (believe it or don't on
If all you want is get a piece of paper so you can get someone to pay you to warm a seat, knock yourself out.
Re:Everything will be half (Score:5, Insightful)
Remember, eventually, there will be another IT crash. Just studying CS gives you little head start on another career. If you think school is hard, changing careers 10 years down the line is even harder.
Re:Everything will be half (Score:5, Insightful)
Even more so, most people change careers regardless of the market. A lot of people are in CS because they enjoy it, but a lot are there for money. Even the ones that enjoy it might not forever. When they see a chance to do something they've always dreamed of, they are going to want to know about more than just programming. Someone that hasn't had economics, or statistics can be crippled in many real world situations (and often not even know it. If they knew it, they could learn.)
Extra exposure also gives you insight to do your programming. Sure, you can write code to spec without knowing what it's doing, but you can make better designs if you understand the problems you're working on. The design team for an accounting package should involve accountants, and programmers who know something about accounting.
I also question whether they drop the less used CS stuff, too. I got my mechanical engineering degree, and, as they say, I wan't immediately useful as a designer. They could have made the curriculum more practical, and I would have been more useful straight out of school, but it would have sacrificed theory and fringe situations. Part of what sets me apart from the non-engineer people around work is knowing the theory, so I understand what's happening and why, and can design better for it. The fringe situations are those rare occurrances that we almost never see, but when they happen they're very hard to figure out, or they could kill someone. I have to keep those in the back of my head, just in case they ever come up.
This school sounds like a glorified trade school. It's very useful, and I'm glad somebody is teaching people how to program, but I don't know if they should call it a BS degree if it isn't well rounded in worldly matters. Someone with a degree should be educated, not just skilled.
Re:Everything will be half (Score:4, Interesting)
I agree that this is a worthy goal (and the primary goal of many schools), but most schools also teach you other things that end up holding people back later in life:
- Copying is cheating
- If you can't take a standardized test for it, then it isn't really knowledge
- Everyone starts with an A, and works their way backwards the less they conform
Every day the value of a college education goes down a bit (I suppose that's the point of the story). Every day the cost goes up a little. While having a degree may help a person become more inquisitive and learn to learn, every day it seems there is less and less value for the time & money in a college education. There are better ways to improve yourself. It is however, a pretty good way to improve a resume.
College Experience Worth Less? Sort of... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Everything will be half (Score:3, Interesting)
Furthermore, I've found it quite obvious that individuals who are predisposed to learn how to learn, will do so regardless of whether or not they went to University. Of course, this is a self-referential comment, but it is also a general observation
Re:Everything will be half (Score:3, Informative)
I know so many people with university education that are incompetent and I know some that are absolutely briliant.
The school doesn't make the man/woman, its their own drive, determination, and their capacity for knowledge.
As for grand-poster: I personally don't relate to the relevence of Calculus or Physics to Programming. I've been in many jobs, and the extent of my math usage has been algebraic. Yes, if your working on weather patterns, then sure it'll help, but look at it this way: If you
Re:Everything will be half (Score:3, Interesting)
My experience is that (by and large) the people who are self-educated will learn more about a subject when their existing knowledge doesn't allow them to proceed with their task, learning enough to let them get back to being 'productive', and the people with formal education will attempt to aquire at least a cursory familiarity with as much ab
Re:Everything will be half (Score:3, Interesting)
i think you're wrong. that "well-roundedness" part is designed to provide the lubrication for the working machine. it's intended to provide a world-view context that makes you easier to get along with, less likely to start trouble, and put you on the same historical/psychological/behavioral/aesthetic plane as the other worker-bees with whom you work, and in whose mi
Re:Everything will be half (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, actually, in theory it's because we are expected to choose our own goverment and therefore need to be able to think on our own.
Well, it's your life. But as someone employed as a sysadmin with a Liberal Arts degree, I would humbly suggest that you might think about reversing that order. Get an education first, then worry about getting job skills. An education will let you figure out what you actually want out of life; you can then decide what if any employment will help you achieve those goals.
And broad education is *not* about "people skills" particularly. It's about breadth of knowledge, ability to tie together ideas from different fields, and ability to learn diverse subjects quickly. Or, as they used to say at my alma mater, it's about becoming a free and happy human being.
Personally I think the university in TFA sounds stupid. They may call that degree a BSCS, but it's just not a Bachelor's degree. A Bachelor's degree is not an industry certification. It's not an industry certification. It's not a sign of fitness to work at a particular job. It's a sign that you dedicated 4 years of your life to beer^H^H^H^H learning in an at least nominally interdisciplinary environment.
Northface is a trade school. There's nothing wrong with trade schools. But it shouldn't call itself a university or its certification a "bachelor's degree". The article even says it's not intended for students out of high school but rather to retrain current workers -- people who, hopefully, already have an education.
Re:Everything will be half (Score:3, Insightful)
Actually by compartmentalizing yourself you end up as one of the consuming worker-bees. The far reaching exposure you get from a 4-year degree is designed not just to train you to work, but to become a leader and contribute not just in the workplace but also society. Things like political science
Re:Everything will be half (Score:2)
Re:Everything will be half (Score:5, Insightful)
Our College/University system is getting watered down as more and more kids just want to get in/out and get a job...
Re:Everything will be half (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Everything will be half (Score:3, Insightful)
Work for 40 hours a week
Sleep for 60 hours a week
Life for 68 hours a week
Seems to me that 'half the fluff removed that will have no bearing on real-world employment' has full applicability to living. Work is one of the least important parts of my life, strictly on an hourly basis, and if I could get away with even less I'd be even happier.
It is not a computer science degree (Score:5, Insightful)
computers than astronomy is about telescopes
Anything that brags about java and
It is probably a programming course.
Re:Everything will be half (Score:4, Insightful)
If the trend of tech is following the same trend in farming and manufacturing, it makes sense that (in order to breath life into tech as a career possibility for future generations) it needs to be made cheaper and accomplishable in a shorter time.
For example, it took farming about 80 years to go from being very profitable to needing subsidy. And it took a goodly amount of time to get a large farming operation going (sometimes generations).
Manufacturing took 40 years to complete that same cycle of going from extremely profitable to "commodity."
Now it is looking like CompSci/Tech is coming in around 20 years (or so); with outsourcing looming as the death-nell to high salaries, who's going to want to go spend 80K on education at university when they'll only be able to make a job that pays $30K? They'll never be able to pay off the investment in their education in a reasonable time.
*If* the trend continues, then I worry about how rapidly the "next thing" is going to come up and shut down... and the thing after that... and after that.
We'll be headed into a society based around *constant* training/retraining; the concept of "career" will have completely vanished.
Hmmm... I really did follow that point down the rabbit hole. 8)
Accredited? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Accredited? (Score:2, Funny)
CS accreditations are worthless anyway. (Score:5, Interesting)
Since I graduated in 1995, tuition at the University of Iowa has tripled. It has done so because the school has locked itself into a number of expensive construction projects and is not able to reduce its cash flow needs to match the decreasing state revenue.
From what I can tell, the quality of instruction has not tripled since my graduation. Even moreso, students that I have advised to pursue Oracle DBA certification as technical electives have been repeatedly refused, even though the university listed Oracle certification as for-credit courses.
The CS departments of most universities have been bought off by Microsoft to the extent that they already spend over a year teaching Visual Basic. They do not use open tools, and their administrative structure reflects this close-minded and obsolete path.
IMHO, State Universities are run in a cartel system that has seen its fair share of waste and corruption. Any ideas for a system that could effectively compete with the public university cartel would be welcome indeed.
Technical school? (Score:5, Insightful)
Taken in that light, 2-year technical schools are nothing new. Any university could get you through in 2 years if you took nothing outside your major.
Sure the classes are nice (Score:2)
There's more to a proper education and university experience then simply aquiring the nesseccary skills to be an effective employee. Personal growth and a well rounded education, I'd like to believe, are why one shoudl go to university, not simply b
Re:Technical school? (Score:2)
I'm still trying to figure out what value was provided with that "variety of experience". Is it "good" to be able to talk about a variety of things? Sure. Is it worth the money you pay, and the time and money lost (opportunity cost, money you could be earning in a career) while you are there? Maybe not. That's more subjective. Unfortunately, most people consider that to be a purely objective question (as will be evident very soon in this slashdo
Re:Technical school? (Score:2)
AP Calc I/II: 8 credits
AP Physics: 8 credits(if you didn't keep your old lab notes you may have to do the labs over again)
AP Chemistry: 4(same as physics)
AP Bio: 4 credits
AP History: 6 credits
AP English Lit.: 3 credits
That is 33 credits, easily equal to a year of college(there may be CS tests, but my school didn't offer them when I was in high school). If you
a new breed of super-nerds (Score:3, Funny)
Interesting, but Not Good (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Interesting, but Not Good (Score:3, Insightful)
Another One (Score:5, Funny)
Nitpicking Symantics (Score:5, Insightful)
I've said this before, and will again. A collection of certificates is not the same as a computer science degree.
Learning to program or to operate a specific set of programs if valuable, don't get me wrong there. But that is not the same thing as understanding the workings of a computer (which I consider Computer Science).
Learning a set of skills is very job-applicable, and very practical. But it should not be called computer science.
Re:Nitpicking Symantics (Score:2)
Computing science has little to do with computers. Computers are tools; computing science is math.
this is just a damn shame (Score:5, Insightful)
these kids are going to come out of school with a CS degree and very little of the knowledge that a COMPUTER SCIENTIST should have.
Now Im not saying that there isnt a place for a 2 year degree that is focused on programming for corprate america. corprate america needs more programmers, especialy ones that have been custom made for the type of work that corps need, but to call them CS majors? I have a hard time beliving that they will realy learn much of the science side of CS in 2 years, while also training in 2 certifications.
Perhaps Im wrong and this cariculum will teach excelent data structure usage, and algorithim analysis and AI and compiler design and low level architecture. But at this point i kind of doubt it.
Re:this is just a damn shame (Score:5, Informative)
Looking at their curriculum course descriptions [northface.edu], I'd say that your doubts are well founded. Looks like a trade school with a few classes in logic and discrete math thrown in. I don't see much on software engineering (aside from lip service to "the complete software life cycle"), let alone any actual computer science.
Re:this is just a damn shame (Score:3, Funny)
And my friends who finished their BA in fine arts have very little knowledge that a BACHELOR ARTIST should have.
Like my Retail Manager Wife, who will never know how to survive as a single male oil painter.
There is such a thing as being too literal. Sure you weren't an literary major?
Re:this is just a damn shame (Score:3, Insightful)
Nonsense. A number of people have relayed accounts here today of the value they received from their college education.
For someone who is really into programming, by the time they get to College they know 1/2 the material or more that will be "taught" to them.
Evidently the many posts stressing that there is much more to computer science than programming have been wasted on you.
Gen-eds are a waste of time. And the forced non-computer science aspect of
Is a BSCS just BS? (Score:5, Insightful)
Unless changed in the last few year's, the 'Big 6' liked anything but CS majors. EDS (I know bad example) even went so far as to prefer MUSIC majors. Their argument was that anyone can be taught to code - the 'free thinkers' in the BA degrees were where their employees resided.
Add to that the out-of-country outsourcing (where specific programming disciplines are taught), and a BSCS does not appear to be a good career path, 2 OR 4 years.
Re:Is a BSCS just BS? (Score:2)
When I was in college (early-mid '80's), there were a TON (probably > 50%) of people in there who had NO actual interest in computers, they were just there because their high school councellor told them that it would get them a bunch of money when they got their job. Most of them are now managers, promoted on the peter principle. There were also many of us who absolutely loved what we were d
What they cut (Score:4, Insightful)
Nothing wrong with that, but nobody should be under the impression that this is as good as a traditional degree with a full curriculum. Unfortunately, the students who graduate from such a program will think they are well rounded, and well educated. That's because they will lack the thinking tools needed to realize that they don't have a full education.
Re:What they cut (Score:2)
I would much prefer to cut liberal arts than core computer fundamentals, like math, data structures, and algorithm analysis. These things are all very important to understanding computer science, and they are invaluable later on in the game.
Learning to think for yourself, on the other hand...
I went to college thinking for myself. And I had some classmates who did too. I also had a lot of classmates who didn't come
IT Degree (Score:2, Insightful)
In theory you could teach a full computer science degree without even touching a computer. Computer Science is the theory behind computation, IT is the practical application of the work.
Not a "University" (Score:4, Insightful)
I do not approach such an approach. I oppose such institution being called "Universities". If you're getting two certs, AND a CS degree, where's the Humanities, History, PE, and other pieces of a well-rounded, universal education?
OT: Some people do not like general education, and that's fine. Go to a two-year (like this one), or another vocational training program. Unfortunately, administrators, wanting to attract these people are "modernizing" university education, and cheapening it at the same time.
CS = trade skill? (Score:4, Interesting)
On another note though, even a general understanding of history, politics, and a host of other subjects one meets in a more "liberal" education is very important and often lacking amongst the general population.
Re:CS = trade skill? (Score:2)
Re:MIT and Stanford avoided CS major at beginning (Score:3, Insightful)
Does anyone else remember the TV adds for "Control Data Institute?" I rember seeing them watching afternoon TV as a kid in the 70s. (CDI adds ran between the "Meet Chuck" mechanic school ads and the DeVry ads.) CDI was on offshoot of Control Data to teach programmers in a trade school environment.
The plumber/electrician analogy is very apt. You wouldn't hire an electrical
it's a good idea (Score:3, Insightful)
Personally i'm sick of university, i was sick of it after the first year and I wish it was over. My attendance rate is near zero percent (literally), and i still manage As? Seems rather ridiculous and a waste of my money, considering everything i've learned about programming is at my current and previous development positions.
Re:it's a good idea (Score:5, Interesting)
Maybe the reason why many employers are requiring 4 year degress in the IT field is to see if you have what it takes to work through the boring stuff. If you are sick of school after only one year, how would you last 30+ years in the work force?
Re:it's a good idea (Score:3, Insightful)
The first two years should focus on math, the Sciences, English, etc. Very necessary coursework.
>My attendance rate is near zero percent (literally), and i still manage As?
Sounds like your college has very low standards.
More than just programming (Score:3, Insightful)
a certification teaches you how to answer questions and follow a set of instructions. a real education teaches you how to think and solve problems.
i'd rather hire one CS student that went to a 4-year, second tier school, than a thousand 2-year certified programming monkeys.
liberal arts may not be necessary after all (Score:2, Interesting)
i think with the right students liberal arts is not needed at university level. after all you forget that stuff after graduating that is if you haven't by graduation day.
brains are going to boil in that program. thats for surer
This is a great idea (Score:3, Insightful)
People don't go to college to learn things. They go to college to get a piece of paper that qualifies them for certain jobs.
This is a program that lets you walk out of there with 2 useful certifications and a degree under your belt. It's a "cut the crap" kind of education.
These people aren't out there to bilk you out of your money, or to brainwash you. They're there to provide a service to a niche market. And you're it.
Re:This is a great idea (Score:3, Insightful)
Getting a degree shows an employer certain things, amongst which are:
1) You lasted university, didn't give up, didn't flake out
2) You are clever enough to do a full degree
3) What university you went to
these are useful. The degree itself hardly matters. What matters is the university you got it from.
These degrees are short 2 year monkey degrees. They are useful if you are in your thirties, want to change career, have a degree under your belt in something else, and you want to do an
Secret revealed (Score:5, Funny)
Apparently that's their secret -- double the caffeine, halve the time needed for a CS degree. Or is a 52 ounce Mountain Dew now a standard beverage for normal college students?
Some people will never learn... (Score:2)
The business plan calls for 1,200 graduates a year by 2007 - five times MIT's 225 graduates in computer-related fields each year, Northface executives say.
And since when do they measure the quality of school based on the number of graduates per year?
Look at the BSCS Requirements (Score:2)
You can get a degree like this at ITT or any number of community colleges
remember.... (Score:2)
4 year (Score:2, Interesting)
Yawn. (Score:5, Insightful)
Course Descriptions [northface.edu]
So
Nothing new here, just another technical institute trying to sell their courses as something they aren't... I have no idea if it is a good program or not, but it isn't a CS degree.
This is NOT Computer Science (Score:5, Insightful)
These people are not going to be taught a wide spread of stuff like in Computer Science that goes from lots of maths and theoretical stuff through to real world stuff through to hardware and all that.
You can but hope that this course will create people that are more than unthinking code monkeys or button clickers.
Technical College (Score:2)
Half the degree (Score:2, Insightful)
Wow (Score:5, Insightful)
If you want to get through your undergrad program really quick, take the AP tests, don't go to some fly-by-night college....
Re:Wow (Score:3, Informative)
15 credits is "certification" courses in various random technologies. Most schools would consider them 1 credit courses at most for a total of 7 credits.
Let me guess (Score:5, Funny)
Quoth the article (Score:2)
Eric Grimson, a Massachusetts Institute of Technology administrator
This is the future (Score:2)
Now a joint IT/MBA four year program - that would have a payoff.
Theory much better...but not ideal (Score:2, Insightful)
Some classes my colleagues need that they offer (Score:2)
Students strengthen their composition and oral presentation skills. Students examine the purpose, structure, logic, and language of expository writing. Students explore and apply appropriate skills for writing and public speaking, including the principles of rhetoric. Students learn the speech, composition, and delivery techniques needed to prepare for a variety of effective presentations.
LA 125 Collaborative and Interpersonal Communications
Students develop colla
It's not a real CS program... (Score:2)
Sally Struthers is the dean.
- sm
What's so weird about it? (Score:4, Insightful)
Students attend classes and work on projects from 8 a.m. until 5 p.m., with one hour for lunch, five days a week. Most assignments are performed in groups as part of lab and project work.
This seems possible. In fact, it seems exactly like what most universities offer - less the out-of-faculty electives.
At my university, a full degree takes 8 semesters, or approximately 4300 hours of coursework (estimating 3 hours in class, and 6 hours out, per week). This can be done in as little as 32 months if one really tries hard. (read: doesn't fail anything, and takes 5 courses a semester with not summers off)
This place is advertising 3980 course hours, a 9-5 school environment, and 47 weeks of class a year.
Really, you are getting the same ammount of education. In fact, you are likely getting more (the 3980 number does not take into account homework time, my 4300 hour estimate does). What you are losing out on is diversity. Which many students don't want.
True, diversity is a valuable asset, and a valuable experience. I enjoyed taking english and writing classes, and found them very useful as well. But if you really want diversity, go to this school, get your first degree in just over two years, and then enroll in a second degree program somewhere else.
Accreditation will never happen (Score:3, Informative)
This is no drop in replacement for a well rounded and indepth degree you'll find at your local University. Accrediation means something, you know.
Training or Education? (Score:3, Insightful)
On the flipside, maybe college can be completed in 2 years if you take away all the fun, alcohol, and women
Its 97% of the class time as a 4 year degree. (Score:3, Informative)
Northface.edu runs 47 weeks a year and the program is composed of ten 10-week quarters.
10 quarters x 10 weeks=100 weeks of class in two years as opposed to 8 semesters x 13 weeks=104 weeks of class in four years.
Its a 4 year degree just a faster, cheaper (by a little bit), stronger one with additional benefits.
It makes you wonder why traditional colleges don't do this. Perhaps it is because they like raking in inflated housing fees and food sales and the annual tuition hikes. Perhaps they are simply milking their aging business model of enslaving their grad students and treating undergrads like cattel instead of customers. For Profit Colleges and technical schools continue to innovate and traditional colleges are still living in the 1950's.
Anyone remember Ars Digita University? (Score:5, Insightful)
Some of the best coders I've ever encountered were under 20. It doesn't really take that long for someone with the right sort of intelligence to develop the skills. So the idea of a two-year crash course isn't unreasonable.
The real problem is, that sort of intelligence isn't all that rare. Which is why a coding career isn't as lucrative as it once was, I guess. These crash courses beguile their audiences into thinking they can be fabulously wealthy just as coders. You need a great deal more to convert computing skill into something other than a moderately paid high stress job.
Know computing, but also know something else, is my advice for most people. What else? Something that you can apply the computing to, basically. There's a lot of choices. Pick one.
A two-year Bay Area CS program (Score:3, Informative)
Mills College (Oakland, CA) has a program with similar goals [mills.edu], although a more academic focus. Specifically, Mills has post-baccalaureate programs [mills.edu] for people who already have a bachelor's degree in another field. Graduates go on to industry or to CS PhD programs, such as University of Washington, MIT, and UCSD. The coursework is primarily upper-division undergraduate CS courses, which are taught by faculty with PhDs from top schools, such as MIT, Princeton, and UC Berkeley.
FYI, I [mills.edu] direct the program. We're having an Open House on Thursday, August 19, and are still accepting applications and awarding aid for this fall. Contact me [mailto] for more information.
trade school (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:trade school (Score:3, Interesting)
It's impossible just to get through the MATH! (Score:3, Insightful)
This is impossible, along with CS courses, in two years.
The problem is they should call the program a degree in "Computer Technlogy" and degree holders should be "Computer Technicians."
I may trust them to crimp connectors on my Ethernet cables, but they're not going to be doing any heavy lifting!
CompSci degree? (Score:3, Interesting)
Well rounded education (Score:3, Insightful)
If you want to go to one of these trade schools and in two years hit the job market, go for it, but the guy who waits another two (or four or six, depending on degree) years is probably going to be able to better mold his career path to the needs of his life.