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The Iron Yard is closed
This school is now closed. Although The Iron Yard is no longer accepting students or running its program, you can still see historical information and The Iron Yard alumni reviews on the school page.
As of July 20, 2017, The Iron Yard is no longer accepting applications. The Iron Yard is a technology education company that offers software development courses both in person, and through corporate training programs across the US. The school offers full-time and part-time immersive programs in Web Development. Beginners can choose from Web Development Basics or Interactive Web Development courses. For career changers, The Iron Yard's flagship bootcamp is the Web Development Career Path, which takes students from zero to job ready. Graduates of the Web Development Career Path will be well-versed in front end and back end fundamentals, and participate in The Iron Yard's Career Support program.
The Iron Yard team strives to create real, lasting change for people, companies, and communities by equipping a diverse workforce with 21st-century digital skills. Since it was launched in 2013, The Iron Yard has prepared thousands of students for careers in technology.
Let's begin by addressing a simple zen about front-end web development in this period of time: there is so much to learn and so little time. Which is why I am glad to have been a part of the Iron Yard's front-end engineering program, but we'll get to that in a moment.
The Cincinnati branch of the Iron Yard is no longer operational. That to me is a truly sad fact... the instructors that I had the pleasure to work, learn, and grow with and even the staff and location will be truly ...
Let's begin by addressing a simple zen about front-end web development in this period of time: there is so much to learn and so little time. Which is why I am glad to have been a part of the Iron Yard's front-end engineering program, but we'll get to that in a moment.
The Cincinnati branch of the Iron Yard is no longer operational. That to me is a truly sad fact... the instructors that I had the pleasure to work, learn, and grow with and even the staff and location will be truly missed. Note that all of the campuses previous employees already have kick-ass new jobs.
Jake Boyles, our instructor, was a highly knowledgeable and capable developer who understood the current web development landscape by heart, and he did a great job teaching our cohort the underlying principles behind many web development paradigms, practices, and pitfalls, and how to apply them in day-to-day development to cut the fat from learning and creating beautiful applications that look great -- both on paper and under-the-hood.
One of the biggest reasons why I loved the Iron Yard was due to their receptiveness to individual needs. I couldn't attend classes near the end of my cohort's academic period due to medical reasons, but our instructor and the staff ('sup Jeff, Alyssa, and Greg) were kind enough with timeline extensions and continued to provide support in the job market.
The course material was truly rigorous, but Jake was always around to help catch you up on anything you missed or if you didn't understand parts of the course work or material.
Overall, I would recommend the Iron Yard if you're already interested in a career in developing using technologies that are already changing the way we live our lives and interact with our friends, family, colleagues, and more. The Web is a powerful concept, and the Iron Yard can help you build a career creating it in an environment that prioritises the learner.
I cannot say enough about my front end development instructor, Eric at the Dallas campus. Not only is he very smart and a great instructor, but you can tell that he genuinly cares about his students and will do what it takes to help them learn. I'm not going to lie, the front end program was one of the most challenging things I've ever done. But along the way I felt support from my classmates and from the entire TIY staff. They want their students to succeed, and it you can feel it.
...I cannot say enough about my front end development instructor, Eric at the Dallas campus. Not only is he very smart and a great instructor, but you can tell that he genuinly cares about his students and will do what it takes to help them learn. I'm not going to lie, the front end program was one of the most challenging things I've ever done. But along the way I felt support from my classmates and from the entire TIY staff. They want their students to succeed, and it you can feel it.
Not to mention, TIY Dallas offers many ways to network and meet others in your shoes. They host several meetups on campus and are a great way to branch out.
Moral of the story: This program kicked my butt, but it was absolutely worth it.
I graduated from the Iron Yard in 2014, and was hired as an instructor in the fall of 2016. My experience as a student was mostly positive, though most in my cohort did not have positive outcomes. Two years later, I started working as an instructor, and I taught 2 cohorts. The company has undergone a lot of recent changes and thought it would be helpful to provide an insider's view.
I'll begin with the positive:
+ Campuses I worked with are staffed with...
I graduated from the Iron Yard in 2014, and was hired as an instructor in the fall of 2016. My experience as a student was mostly positive, though most in my cohort did not have positive outcomes. Two years later, I started working as an instructor, and I taught 2 cohorts. The company has undergone a lot of recent changes and thought it would be helpful to provide an insider's view.
I'll begin with the positive:
+ Campuses I worked with are staffed with sincere and hard working individuals. Instructors are motivated and want their students to learn and succeed ( though this is not always the case -- there have been some dreadful instructors ). Campus directors and ops staff are mostly eyeing the bottom line and KPI's but are generally well intentioned.
+ The company is shifting toward activity-driven classes (as opposed to lectures) which seems to be a net benefit for the students. Watching a live coding demo for three hours can be very dry and is unproductive for most -- especially those students having trouble with the material.
+ Good instructional staff to student ratio. About 8-9 students to 1 instructor.
On to the negative:
+ There are instructors teaching languages in which they have no professional experience and were asked to learn ( or 'upskill' in company-speak ) in a very brief period. There are mobile developers and .NET instructors teaching Java, and UI Designers teaching. Javascript instructors teaching Ruby
+ The company "career support" is a joke. Basically consists of a trello board for establishing a workflow in following up with companies, reminders to organize your portfolio (with little instruction how), and circulating publicly available job listings on Slack. The campus director also provides references, but isn't really in a position to evaluate the caliber of the student.
+ High instructor turnover. Many talented instructors have left the company due to bad faith and lack of transparency from upper management. This has been an ongoing trend for the company over the last 3 years.
+ Low job placement rate. I don't know what numbers they are publishing or how they are massaging them, but a substantial number of students who enroll in the program and graduate do not ever end up employed as devs.
+ Everybody gets a trophy and instructors are tacitly pressured to graduate 100% of students no matter their standing in the course. The company is even willing to allow students to stay in the program if they cheat so long as the student keeps paying tuition ( though these students won't be awarded a graduation certificate ).
+ The new "Web Development Career Path" is tragicomical. The academics team is a specatular mess and the newline platform is buggy and sloppy. Two weeks before launch, they were pleaing instructors for assignments in order to fill out content and as of week 3, they still didn't have the curriculums ready for the Backend Fundamentals or the Specializations
+ The content writers for the curriculum appear to have little experience, and frankly, don't seem to be very good devs -- based on their output and the activities they've created, I wouldn't contract them for a project. The slipshod activities are incomplete, cumbersome to distribute, and many recommended solutions are not best practices.
+ There is minimal training for instructors or examples in running a flipped classroom for coding, so instructors don't know how to teach the material. Lessons, activities, projects, and assessments are distributed through the newline platform and students are encouraged to fend for themselves in the name of learner autonomy and responsibility.
+ For the Language Specialization in Java and Ruby, students have 4 weeks to learn an entirely new programming language (first 8 weeks are in Javascript). The academic team incredibly believes will make them "fully-qualified, junior-level, professional developers".
+ The cohorts are now overlapping, so you as a student will have instructors planning and organizing 2 cohorts at the same time for students of many different levels and with various specializations. These overlapping cohorts will allow each campus to target enrollment of ~100 students for the year ( as opposed to ~60 ), and will flood the local market with McDevs who have mostly identical portfolio pieces.
Everything about the "Web Development Career Path" has been very poorly conceived and worse implemented. There are many ways to learn to code and if your instructor is good, your time might be productively spent here but it's a costly gamble for the aforementioned reasons.
The 12 week course to being a developer was a challenge, but a rewarding one. You learn to think differently, and enjoy the process of it. I learned a lot from my time at The Iron Yard and it helped start my career.
The TIY team is made up of kind and helpful people that want to see you succeed. They are approachable and there if you need help with work or even when you need to talk things through. They know the work is tough so they help where they can. Part of what was great a...
The 12 week course to being a developer was a challenge, but a rewarding one. You learn to think differently, and enjoy the process of it. I learned a lot from my time at The Iron Yard and it helped start my career.
The TIY team is made up of kind and helpful people that want to see you succeed. They are approachable and there if you need help with work or even when you need to talk things through. They know the work is tough so they help where they can. Part of what was great about my experience was having their support when I needed it.
I am a mom who decided to make a career switch. I loved web development, and really wanted to secure a career path that would allow me to support my family without question. I spent a lot of time evaluating coding bootcamps based on cost, length of the program, classroom environement (online vs classroom), quality of the teachers and student outcomes. I was very pleased with the education I recieved at The Iron Yard's Charlotte Campus. I really appreciated the professional atmosphere o...
I am a mom who decided to make a career switch. I loved web development, and really wanted to secure a career path that would allow me to support my family without question. I spent a lot of time evaluating coding bootcamps based on cost, length of the program, classroom environement (online vs classroom), quality of the teachers and student outcomes. I was very pleased with the education I recieved at The Iron Yard's Charlotte Campus. I really appreciated the professional atmosphere of the teachers and support staff at The Iron Yard.
This commitment is intense, oftentimes overwhelming, and completely doable if you are someone who loves to learn, loves the classroom experience, and is driven to create. Our typical day included morning lecture from 9am - 12:15pm. This was time that we were introduced to new concepts at a breakneck pace. We would typically run through high level concepts, followed by building small applications to use what we had just learned. There was also time for going over homework questions.
One of the first things you have to decide to balance is how you plan to absorb the class. I am a notetaker and found it difficult at first to learn what to record. Sometimes I found it beneficial to code along with the instructor, but other times I felt it was better to just watch and intake what was being demonstrated. We always had access to the code after class and our instructor always took the time to make notes in the code for us to reflect on for future use. I really appreciated his emphasis on best practices and clean, dry coding. More than that, I really felt that his having a Masters in Computer Science contributed greatly to the depth of the class. He could teach code, of course, but he could also go deep into more high level ideas and theory when our class wanted to know more about CS topics.
Everyday you have an assignment based on the lecture and code practice done during class. You spend the afternoons working on these assignments. The instructor was always around for questions and he always did a nice job of helping without giving you the answer. This is important because you have to learn to ask the right questions, research the right resources, and get to solutions without serious hand holding. Weekend assignments were always bigger projects that really incorporated everything learned from the past week.
One highlight of the experience was getting the opportunity to do multiple projects with your Backend/Java collegues. Learning how to work through a project, not just getting the code right, but getting the setup and communication right between partners, is a huge skill that I reflected upon in job interviews. Our final project, which paired a frontend and backend person, was invaluable as I really learned how to think about scoping out a doable application in the two week time frame given. And I learned how to map out this project in tandem with my amazing Java partner.
The job search is painful as it takes time, and you must confront the interview process. TIY-Charlotte did provide us with several opportunities for interview experiences. They also spent time teaching us about resume writing, LinkedIn profiles, and using Trello to organize your job hunt. After a couple of months, I found two opportunities after my cohort completed - a contract position and a software internship with a great and well established company. I am thrilled to be financially secure and able to support my family! I am also thrilled with the job prospects going forward. So long as you keep learning, this industry needs you!
I would conclude by saying that for any single parents struggling to find a career the coding school path is legitimate, and I found The Iron Yard - Charlotte to be fantastic. I did take out a loan to finish the program, and finding the childcare support is definitely difficult. The kids don't always understand why you are so preoccupied, but for twelve weeks, your kids can brave it. Just let them know that going back to school is important to everyone, and in the end, everyone will be happy!
I attended the Front End program in Charlotte in early 2016. It turned out being one of the best decisions I've made in my life, and that's not being hyperbolic. I spent about 70-80 hours/week with the program in the three months I was there. It was tough, but you can do anything for three months, right? I truly got so much out of the program, not only because of the course material itself, but mainly to the instructor of the program - he skated a line between being very knowledgeable and ...
I attended the Front End program in Charlotte in early 2016. It turned out being one of the best decisions I've made in my life, and that's not being hyperbolic. I spent about 70-80 hours/week with the program in the three months I was there. It was tough, but you can do anything for three months, right? I truly got so much out of the program, not only because of the course material itself, but mainly to the instructor of the program - he skated a line between being very knowledgeable and letting you come to conclusions and solving problems on your own. I ended up landing a great gig shortly upon graduating the program for a great company that I'm still with today. The only thing I would caution is the job assistance aspect - and this is from my own experience. I didn't get a lot of help finding a job, so I just made finding a job my full-time job. Again, this is only my experience, and I've heard that it's actually gotten much better at the Charlotte campus with job help. If I had to make the choice again, I would definitely choose to attend The Iron Yard.
I attended The Iron Yard a couple months after receiving my computer science degree. My programming skills were solid, but how to apply them was a mystery. Throughout my degree I wrote a fair bit of code, however, the assignments were incredibly abstract. I don't recall having written any sort of application that could serve a general purpose.
The Iron Yard sharpened my programming skills and taught me what was possible with those skills. Back at school we discussed Software as ...
I attended The Iron Yard a couple months after receiving my computer science degree. My programming skills were solid, but how to apply them was a mystery. Throughout my degree I wrote a fair bit of code, however, the assignments were incredibly abstract. I don't recall having written any sort of application that could serve a general purpose.
The Iron Yard sharpened my programming skills and taught me what was possible with those skills. Back at school we discussed Software as a Service (SaaS), but never really got around too it. The Iron Yard has given me the confidence to build applications that provide service and reliability to users.
The Iron Yard in Tampa/St. Pete is lead by some amazing people. The front-end instructor that I studied with, Jason Perry, is extremely well respected in the Javascript AND Ruby communities. That would be enough but he also proved to be an amazing person and passionate teacher. Although I didn't have classes with the other instructors, Mark and Gavin, both were supportive, knowledgable, and eager to help even if my questions weren't in their area of expertise. I also can't say enough good ...
The Iron Yard in Tampa/St. Pete is lead by some amazing people. The front-end instructor that I studied with, Jason Perry, is extremely well respected in the Javascript AND Ruby communities. That would be enough but he also proved to be an amazing person and passionate teacher. Although I didn't have classes with the other instructors, Mark and Gavin, both were supportive, knowledgable, and eager to help even if my questions weren't in their area of expertise. I also can't say enough good things about Toni, Katherine, and Holly as well. All of them are extremely helpful and caring. You can tell that they love their jobs and take what they are doing very seriously. They are very intentional about creating a safe, open-minded, and diverse atmosphere both in the student cohorts and the industry meet-ups that they host (which are a huge perk for networking). We had an very diverse cohort and one of the unexpected fringe benefits is that I feel that I've gained some really great friends along the way.
As part of the career prep we did mock interviews with industry professionals and ironically, I made a connection in my mock interview that turned into a real interview and eventually, my current job! I was hired about 4 weeks after graduation and I'm currently working as a front-end/web designer. I had a little bit of design experience prior to TIY but I wouldn't have considered myself qualified for a full-time job. TIY filled in the gaps, provided me great opportunities, and now I'm excited to be pursuing a new career.
Overall, my experience was positive but to be completely honest there were some challenges. I spent a ton of time studying and working on projects, at least 80 hours each week and probably more for the weeks leading up to our final projects. It was hard for me to manage my expectations of how much content I would actually be able to master in 12 weeks. I'm also married with 2 kids and it was extremely hard on them. It was a good start but I'm constantly challenged to keep up and learn new skills to be effective in my job (a fact that the instructors were very transparent about). TIY provided me a foot in the door to a new career and frankly it was an expensive door. I would highly suggest that you take as much time as possible to assess whether or not it is a good fit for you. If so, go for it and give it everything you've got!
I recently completed the Front-End Engineering course at the St Pete/Tampa location and I cannot recommend The Iron Yard enough. Within 6 weeks of graduating I was employed, and honestly, in my opinion, that is the best way to judge a coding bootcamp. I think about half my cohort was employed within 2 months, and almost everyone within 3. I know my college didn't even have that kind of job placement success rate--and it was super tiny.
That said, it is a lot of work, so you need ...
I recently completed the Front-End Engineering course at the St Pete/Tampa location and I cannot recommend The Iron Yard enough. Within 6 weeks of graduating I was employed, and honestly, in my opinion, that is the best way to judge a coding bootcamp. I think about half my cohort was employed within 2 months, and almost everyone within 3. I know my college didn't even have that kind of job placement success rate--and it was super tiny.
That said, it is a lot of work, so you need to make sure that you are willing to work your butt off. I describe it to people like you are treading water and little by little bits of word float toward you. You hold on to one piece of wood, the another. You tie those bits of wood together into a makeshift raft. You keep adding to it, and by the end you have a boat. It won't be the best boat, probably a mess in reality, but it will work!
This isn't like high school, or even some college courses, this is an intensive program to teach you things that take many others years to learn. If you expect things to be spoon fed to you, or to come away knowing everything, you will be sorely mistaken. While the instruction was language specific, it is also focused on teaching you how to teach yourself--a valuable skill that not everyone has naturally. Programming is constantly evolving, so even if you came out being a javascript and react expert, in a year the language would evolve and the frameworks would change. You will constantly need to learn new things, and that is what I liked about The Iron Yard, that it focuses on helping you to keep learning after the program. However, the instructors are on hand to help answer your questions and guide you through the process. You could learn programming on your own, but the major benefit of The Iron Yard is having top notch instructors available to help you. However, you must be willing to help yourself.
If you are giving the program your all, the instructors and staff will go out of their way to help you during this stressful time--and it will be stressful. My background is in academia, so I have spent many sleepless months trying to get papers and dissertations finished. Stress wise, TIY is pretty similar, but completely manageable. It's about 12 weeks of tons of stress, but the relief of getting your first job and paycheck afterwards is totally worth it!
I learned Javascript at TIY, but my job is actually a full-stack position, involving ruby and C#. There was a big learning curve for this job, but I felt prepared and capable of tackling it because of TIY. I also have been able to reach out to the instructors when I've been completely stuck. I remember a former student visited during the cohort. He had just gotten a job in C# and the .Net instructor voluntarily worked with him for a day to teach him the language. That instructor hadn't even been in Florida when that graduate attended The Iron Yard, but he was just as invested in this graduate as he was his current students. That's something I feel that really sets TIY a part from a lot of other programs.
I recommend TIY to all my friends who are interested and willing to work hard. Anyone can do it, even if you have no experience. Just do your prework, get some sleep, and (if you are in Tampa), listen to Toni (the campus director), she will be your biggest advocate and will help you get that job! Opt in to all career support counseling!
The Iron Yard was one of the best decisions I ever made. But it was also one of the hardest things I've ever done. It is rigorous and grueling and you can get a little defeated sometimes, but at the end of the day it pays off. I couldn't have asked for a better instructor and campus director at the Columbia campus. We were the last cohort to be in Columbia and I hate to see it go because TIY is truly a fantastic program. I learned an immense amount of knowledge in 12 weeks. Information tha...
The Iron Yard was one of the best decisions I ever made. But it was also one of the hardest things I've ever done. It is rigorous and grueling and you can get a little defeated sometimes, but at the end of the day it pays off. I couldn't have asked for a better instructor and campus director at the Columbia campus. We were the last cohort to be in Columbia and I hate to see it go because TIY is truly a fantastic program. I learned an immense amount of knowledge in 12 weeks. Information that was so well taught that I was able to get a job offer before the last day of class ended. If you have a passion for this field and you want to learn what you need to learn to get hired, TIY is the best place you can go for that. I can't recommend it enough for anyone whose interested, just be prepared for an intense workload and lots of knowledge thrown at you. But if you put in the time and effort, it's one of the most best things you will do.
I went from zero coding (honestly, I did very little HTML/CSS and almost no Javascript preparation) to now being confident in writing web apps. The 3-month immersive boot camp was one of the most challenging experiences I have gone through, but the reward of having a hard skill to enter into the workforce is huge. The campus environment is very supportive and though I often felt exhausted, the support system kept me going. Though I'm only a week out from finishing the course and just now e...
I went from zero coding (honestly, I did very little HTML/CSS and almost no Javascript preparation) to now being confident in writing web apps. The 3-month immersive boot camp was one of the most challenging experiences I have gone through, but the reward of having a hard skill to enter into the workforce is huge. The campus environment is very supportive and though I often felt exhausted, the support system kept me going. Though I'm only a week out from finishing the course and just now entering into the job search process, I am confident in my skills, process, and ability to continue to grow in the tech developer scene.
How much does The Iron Yard cost?
The average bootcamp costs $14,142, but The Iron Yard does not share pricing information. You can read a cost-comparison of other popular bootcamps!
What courses does The Iron Yard teach?
The Iron Yard offers courses like .
Where does The Iron Yard have campuses?
Is The Iron Yard worth it?
The Iron Yard hasn't shared alumni outcomes yet, but one way to determine if a bootcamp is worth it is by reading alumni reviews. 173 The Iron Yard alumni, students, and applicants have reviewed The Iron Yard on Course Report - you should start there!
Is The Iron Yard legit?
We let alumni answer that question. 173 The Iron Yard alumni, students, and applicants have reviewed The Iron Yard and rate their overall experience a 4.42 out of 5.
Does The Iron Yard offer scholarships or accept the GI Bill?
Right now, it doesn't look like The Iron Yard offers scholarships or accepts the GI Bill. We're always adding to the list of schools that do offer Exclusive Course Report Scholarships and a list of the bootcamps that accept the GI Bill.
Can I read The Iron Yard reviews?
You can read 173 reviews of The Iron Yard on Course Report! The Iron Yard alumni, students, and applicants have reviewed The Iron Yard and rate their overall experience a 4.42 out of 5.
Is The Iron Yard accredited?
While bootcamps must be approved to operate, accreditation is relatively rare. The Iron Yard doesn't yet share information about their accreditation status.
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