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UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps offer 24-week, part-time courses in web development, or data analytics, and 18-week, part-time courses in digital marketing, technology project management, and product management. The full stack curriculum includes HTML, CSS, JavaScript, jQuery, Bootstrap, Express.js, Node.js, databases, MongoDB, MySQL, and Git.
The data curriculum includes programming in Excel, Python, R programming, JavaScript charting, HTML/CSS, API interactions, SQL, Tableau, fundamental statistics, machine learning, and more. Enjoy close collaboration with other professionals while receiving hands-on experience.
The digital marketing curriculum covers highly relevant skills, training you in marketing strategy fundamentals, optimizing campaigns and websites, digital advertising and automation strategy, and more. You will get hands-on experience with tools such as Google Analytics, Facebook Ads Manager, and Wordpress.
The technology project management program takes a multidisciplinary approach to developing in-demand technical, leadership, and business management skills. The curriculum covers requirements documentation, test plans, traditional, agile and hybrid methodologies, scrum frameworks, resource planning, and more.
The product management curriculum teaches in-demand product management skills, starting with the essentials. Learners will master the tools to set themselves apart and deliver great products via roadmap development, backlog management, product life cycle management, A/B testing, and data analysis.
Applicants do not need previous experience to enroll, but once admitted, all students will complete a pre-course tutorial. As the programs are part-time, UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps are designed for working professionals and students who are actively pursuing a career change or advancement or are looking to gain a new skill set.
Students will benefit from a wide range of career services to be positioned for success through graduation and beyond. Services include portfolio reviews, mock interviews, one-on-one career coaching, and more. Upon program completion, learners will receive a Certificate of Completion from the William and Ida Friday Center for Continuing Education at UNC-Chapel Hill and will have a portfolio of projects to demonstrate their mastery of the topics covered throughout their boot camp.
UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps are offered in collaboration with edX.
I waited until I was close to a year removed from finishing the program so that I could write I very honest and not emotional review.
I will preface this with I had an amazing experience and I landed a great job at one of the top companies in the Triangle. Trilogy's strength are great and their weaknesses are terrible. One of there weaknesses is their non-existent acceptance criteria. Most people in the class did not complete there pre class assignments and I would say 10-20% shoul...
I waited until I was close to a year removed from finishing the program so that I could write I very honest and not emotional review.
I will preface this with I had an amazing experience and I landed a great job at one of the top companies in the Triangle. Trilogy's strength are great and their weaknesses are terrible. One of there weaknesses is their non-existent acceptance criteria. Most people in the class did not complete there pre class assignments and I would say 10-20% should not have been allowed in for the simple fact that they had such little experience that they were so far behind from day 1 and they never had a chance to catch up. It was not fair, they were set up for failure and wasted their money. For the people that were prepared we hit the ground running from day 1. The amount of learning that takes place is in incredible. My Teacher and TA's were amazing. They cared about our success and they worked very hard. I still keep in touch with all of them. The other co-hort going on at the same time did not have as good of a teacher and TAs and they had a much lower success rate. I thank God that I got the teachers that I did. Our Student Success Manager (not to be confused with career services) was great as well.
Trilogy does give you a very fair expectation of how much work this class is going to take and how much time is necessary in and out of class. I would say maybe 25% of the capable students actually put in the amount of time Trilog suggest 20-40 hours outside of class. There was a huge difference between those students and the ones that didn't. I put in on average 30 hours outside of class with a Full-time job so it is possible. The curriclum was great other than you spend 2 weeks learning .net and C# impossible and a waste of time. Also, the part of class where you are learning while doing the final projects is also impossible (testing and algorithms) because the final project is expected to be in React which nobody had a grasp on so everybody is giving all their time and effort into completing that.
The two biggest negatives outside of the lack of acceptance vetting is that students who did not put in effort and did not complete there projects or homework assignments (but did turn them in) graduated with the same certificate that people who busted there ass did. Not fair to either group.
The career services did nothing for me and I tried to engage and work with them. They also never gave anyone an honest expectation of how much work was going to be required after class for them to find employment(continuing ed, interview prepe, resume / portfolio / networking). Our career service person was also negative and was never completely forthcoming. At one point she was encouraging me to learn PHP and word press "becuase there is high demand there" which was here being lazing and pushing blame back on me. She also told me I should expect a job for less that half of the salary of the job I ended up taking because "low starting salaries" in my area. I would say out of the 40 - 50 people in my cohort I am one of 3 that I know of that found full time role as a developer in 6 months. A few got lesser roles still in IT or partime / contract and To be fair there were several people that got promotions at there current employer and I am sure the knowledge gained from the program had something to do with that. YOU WILL NOT BE HIREABLE upon completing the class, but you will be on your way if you continue to put in the same amount of work you did while in class.
My conclusion is I LOVED the class, but if you do not have a little bit of a self taugh background and the drive to put in 40-50 hours a week into this during and after the class you are wasting your money. If you expect career services to do anything other than send you crappy jobs listings to apply to (that often don't match the skills from class and all you classmates are also getting and applying to) you are wasting your money.
Be honest with yourself before spending your money this is not a silver bullet and there are no short cuts.
Boot Camp Team of UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps
Community Team
Sep 10, 2018
Boot Camp Team of UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps
Community Team
Mar 20, 2023
Boot Camp Team of UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps
Community Team
Dec 09, 2022
Boot Camp Team of UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps
Community Team
May 31, 2022
Boot Camp Team of UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps
Community Team
Feb 18, 2022
Boot Camp Team of UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps
Community Team
Feb 07, 2022
Boot Camp Team of UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps
Community Team
Jan 31, 2022
Boot Camp Team of UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps
Community Team
Jan 31, 2022
Boot Camp Team of UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps
Community Team
Jan 31, 2022
Boot Camp Team of UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps
Community Team
Jan 31, 2022
Boot Camp Team of UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps
Community Team
Jan 31, 2022
Boot Camp Team of UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps
Community Team
Jan 31, 2022
How much does UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps cost?
UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps costs around $13,495. On the lower end, some UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps courses like Digital Marketing - Part-Time cost $9,245.
What courses does UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps teach?
UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps offers courses like AI Boot Camp - Part-Time, Cybersecurity - Part-Time, Data Science and Visualization - Part-Time, Digital Marketing - Part-Time and 1 more.
Where does UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps have campuses?
UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps has in-person campuses in Chapel Hill and Raleigh.
Is UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps worth it?
UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps hasn't shared alumni outcomes yet, but one way to determine if a bootcamp is worth it is by reading alumni reviews. 95 UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps alumni, students, and applicants have reviewed UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps on Course Report - you should start there!
Is UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps legit?
We let alumni answer that question. 95 UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps alumni, students, and applicants have reviewed UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps and rate their overall experience a 4.83 out of 5.
Does UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps offer scholarships or accept the GI Bill?
Right now, it doesn't look like UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps 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 UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps reviews?
You can read 95 reviews of UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps on Course Report! UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps alumni, students, and applicants have reviewed UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps and rate their overall experience a 4.83 out of 5.
Is UNC-Chapel Hill Boot Camps accredited?
Yes
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