Degree program or bootcamp?
Sloan the DEV Moderator

Sloan the DEV Moderator @sloan

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Degree program or bootcamp?

Publish Date: Jun 9 '22
18 16

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Hey, all. I was just wondering if I should pursue a degree program or skip that and go straight to a bootcamp. I'd really like to get things started soon, but I don't know the pros/cons of either choice. Would love some guidance on which is more beneficial in the long run. Thank you.

Comments 16 total

  • Sakshi
    SakshiJun 9, 2022

    Hey!
    I think degree program is better than bootcamp. Like idk what is the curriculum of degree program in your region, but in India, there are many subjects taught in one degree program, if its computer science we have everything from c++ to blockchain. While Bootcamp teaches one particular stack or tech in short time. But you can network better, learn more, learn things other than what is in books, visit campus, and can have fun with friends if you are enrolled in degree program.

  • Aaron Storrer
    Aaron StorrerJun 9, 2022

    While you will learn more practical skills at a bootcamp, a degree will provide you with more opportunities in the long run. In addition, with a four year degree you can more easily transition to another professional field later on, should you find yourself growing more interested in something specific. (Data Science, Management, etc.)

  • Mohammad Javed
    Mohammad JavedJun 9, 2022

    Have you tried having a look at FreeCodeCamp?

    That'll get you started and it's free. There are loads of online resources you can use to learn without having a degree.

    I found when I graduated like over 10 years ago that without the real life experience no-one wanted to take me on, I even offered to work for free to get that IRL experience.

  • Konstantin BIFERT
    Konstantin BIFERTJun 9, 2022

    It depends on what you want to focus on (the field), the time you want to spend studying, the money you have, the kind of learning you prefer etc...
    More details are welcome overall.

  • Brad
    BradJun 9, 2022

    The highest level pros/cons of the two are essentially:

    College

    • pros
      • Will provide the most opportunities now, and in the future
      • Will provide the most resources related to getting jobs
      • job fairs, networking with peers, research, access to facilities, clubs, etc.
      • Will teach you the most relevant long-term concepts
      • Minimal variation in quality (usually pretty high due to credentials)
    • cons
      • Will take longest
      • Will cost the most (cost varies depending on a number of factors)
      • Requires the longest commitment of "focus"
      • Medium level risk
      • non-credential colleges could be scams (!)

    Bootcamp

    • pros
      • Will be fastest shortest/condensed
      • Learn most recent/relevant technical skills
      • Possible opportunities for job placements
    • cons
      • high risk
      • highest variation in quality
      • possible extreme cost for quality of knowledge

    The third option is self-taught, which I wont go into here. Its also worth keeping in mind you can combine these, and no one path is always the best path as it depends on a number of factors.


    I've provided advice to this question many times as a contributor to the freeCodeCamp community. (which provides a "self-taught route" that can go with or without the above 2 options)

    One of the main things to consider, even if your consider self-taught (with or without freeCodeCamp) is if you can go to college, you should go to college.

    College is hands down the highest quality option, and provides the most resources compared the other two choices. Simply put, going to higher education puts you into a place that is built for you to learn. Bootcamps are similar but vary in quality, from near college-level condensed focused courses, to basically scams. Unlike schools, which could use governmental/non-profit resources to help sustain it, bootcamps are usually "for profit" more often.

    If you can't afford college, either via your time or costs related to it, then bootcamps might be a viable option. However, keep in mind a bootcamp cannot replace college. Even the best bootcamps will teach you a smaller factor of knowledge simply due to the timespan spent learning. The worse are nothing more than paid-for-classes for things you can learn yourself for free. So do your research on any specific bootcamps your looking into.

    "in the long run" college will always be the best choice. Bootcamps might get you into a job faster simply due to the smaller time-scales, but that leaves you "learning on the job" vastly more what you could learn in a higher educational learning settings. This approach will always be higher risk, as if you fail within school you'll get bad grades, if you fail on the job you could get sued/fired!

  • Jon Wright
    Jon WrightJun 9, 2022

    Unless the boot camp is free, or close to free, I'd suggest a degree.

    With a boot camp you will likely learn trending technologies, but don't believe them when they say you will be job ready in 16 weeks. That's just not realistic. You will continue to feel overwhelmed.

    I took a 16 week boot camp. It took me much longer to get to a point that I felt ready to actively search for a job.

    Maybe I over prepared, but I know I wasn't ready at 16 weeks. I didn't understand the flow of data in the project I had built. It just mimicked another project, so it did work.

    Fortunately, my boot camp was free. I will say, it did set me on the road to know how to learn for myself, and that is valuable. But it didn't deliver on making me employable when I completed the course.

  • K-Sato
    K-SatoJun 9, 2022

    I don't have a CS degree but I always strongly recommend ppl to get a CS/Related degree especially if the person asking me is in high school. If you already have a degree and have some work experience, then going to a bootcamp makes sense.

  • Randall
    RandallJun 10, 2022

    I have a BS in computer science, and I currently work at a place where there are a lot of bootcampers.

    From my observations, I think that a bootcamp is much more time/cost effective if you want to get into the software field, BUT bootcampers don't do as well when the going gets tough. They often aren't good at algorithmic efficiency, race conditions, and other "details". Of course, they can learn those things, but CS majors understand these things out-of-the-gate.

    Plus, the university life is just fun, I wouldn't have missed it for the world.

    So I'm glad that I got a 4 year CS degree, but I do think that a bootcamp is a very viable option, and ultimately is probably a better use of your money pound-for-pound. But overall, a CS degree gives you higher quality knowledge.

  • Jon Randy 🎖️
    Jon Randy 🎖️Jun 10, 2022

    I have no degree, and no formal qualifications to be a developer. I've never attended a bootcamp or training course of any kind.

    None of this has been a barrier to a successful career. Self-taught is very definitely an option, if you have curiosity and enthusiasm. Most of the best developers I know taught themselves.

  • Ishaan Sheikh
    Ishaan SheikhJun 10, 2022

    If you get a good University and it is not a remote one go for a degree. And if you are unable to get a good University then I think it will be better to go for a bootcamp. Also you need to consider the cost of both.
    This is my opinion based on what I have seen in India.

  • Etienne Burdet
    Etienne BurdetJun 10, 2022

    Depends where you are in your career and where you'd like to go.

    • If you want to ship simple web products, because you are launching a company, have another main skill etc. and feel like you're hitting a limit of what you can do by self-learning 👉 bootcamp
    • If you want to be generally good at programming, maybe open yourself to lower level coding, stuff like devOps, 3D, game-programming, scientific/industrial programming etc. 👉 academic degree
  • Eljay-Adobe
    Eljay-AdobeJun 10, 2022

    I learned to be a programmer by self study.

    I eventually got a BS degree in Computer Science (go Gophers!).

    I've since learned how to be a software engineer. (Where I'm using the definition of software engineer that Google's Titus Winters and Hyrum Wright use.)

  • Lorenzo Zarantonello
    Lorenzo ZarantonelloJun 11, 2022

    It depends!
    I was in your shoes a few years ago!
    There are so many factors to consider!

    If money isn't a problem, a bootcamp is the best option.
    If you seek general knowledge a degree might be worth it.

    However, as Nate said "A career in software requires the ability to constantly and quickly learn". Start with free resources like freecodecamp.org and see if you like it.

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