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Berkeley Boot Camps offer 12-week, full-time and 24-week, part-time courses in web development; 24-week, part-time courses in data analytics, UX/UI, cybersecurity and financial technology (FinTech) and 18-week, part-time digital marketing and technology project management courses. 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 UX/UI program provides hands-on training in user-centric design research, design thinking, visual prototyping and wireframing, interface design, storyboarding, visual design theory, web prototyping with HTML5 and CSS, interaction design with JavaScript and jQuery, and more.
The cybersecurity curriculum offers hands-on training in networking, systems, web technologies, databases, and defensive and offensive cybersecurity.
The digital marketing curriculum covers highly relevant skills, training students in marketing strategy fundamentals, optimizing campaigns and websites, digital advertising and automation strategy and more. Students will get hands-on experience with tools such as Google Analytics, Facebook Ads Manager, and Wordpress.
The fintech curriculum covers Python programming, financial libraries, machine learning algorithms, Ethereum, blockchain, and more.
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.
Applicants do not need prior experience to enroll in the bootcamps, but once admitted, all students will complete a pre-course tutorial. Berkeley Boot Camps are designed for working professionals and individuals who are actively pursuing a career change or advancement or 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, resume and social media profile support, career content and practice sessions, technical interview training, 1:1 mentor support, soft skills training and more. Upon program completion, graduates will receive a Certificate of Completion from Berkeley Extension, and will build a portfolio of projects in our web development, data analytics, UX/UI, digital marketing, financial technology or technical project management programs and gain skills applicable to industry certifications in our cybersecurity program.
Berkeley Boot Camps are offered in collaboration with edX.
Rosa Tadeo of Berkeley Boot Camps
Student Success Manager
Sep 10, 2017
I recently (1.5 months ago) completed the 6-month variant of the UC Berkeley Bootcamp as one of the members of the very first cohort, and just this past week I excepted a job as a front-end engineer at a startup with a starting salary in the 90k range.
Before coming to this bootcamp I had been teaching myself to program for about a year, but slowly, and had also been able to essentially intern(largely for free) for a company slowly learning to write automated tests in Python. So...
I recently (1.5 months ago) completed the 6-month variant of the UC Berkeley Bootcamp as one of the members of the very first cohort, and just this past week I excepted a job as a front-end engineer at a startup with a starting salary in the 90k range.
Before coming to this bootcamp I had been teaching myself to program for about a year, but slowly, and had also been able to essentially intern(largely for free) for a company slowly learning to write automated tests in Python. So my experience with code was past absolute beginner.
I knew I needed to find a way to elevate myself quickly to a professional developer's level, and I knew that the quickest way to do this was to focus on a Javascript - front end to full-stack engineering bootcamp.
After researching a number of them, I chose this one partly because it was among the least expensive by far, and also because of the name recognition (Berkeley). I was happy about the prospect of taking 6 months to learn everything I wanted as I knew I would need to work part-time and generally use the time to consume more information on my own.
This bootcamp took me and my cohort through a cirriculum that rivaled if not largely beat the cirriculum of more famous and expensive place like HR, App Acad and Dev BC. This according to notes(and code) compared with my friends who attended each. They cover everything about the front end from your first introduction to HTML/CSS to coding in Javascript all the way through to React powered full-stack applications.
The instructors Michael and David were both excellent. Personable, kind, and (most importantly) genuinely engaged with the idea of transferring as much of their knowledge of the science and art of programming professionally onto all the student. Michael had a traditional CS background and a number of years of work while David was a grad of HR with a couple of years of working experience, which made them each compelling for their individual experiences. They are both excellent programmers.
The same idea carries throughout the organization. Rosa the career director cares for the concerns and roadblocks individual students might face, and Sam of career services is constantly involved in building your public profiles and presentational person for career services. Although, ultimately, this part of the program is perhaps the weakest, as their networks are not the same as your bigger and far far more expensive BC's.
I also got a chance to meet Pavan, someone from the parent organization of the BC, a company called Trilogy that partners with Universities throughout the country to create these bootcamps for them. Pavan was also smart, kind, and commited to hearing about my experience as a student. They all wanted to see me thrive, and not just collect a check and pepper you with information only to leave you to "sink or swim" as the case in some other programs.
By the mid-point of the program we were already writing full-stack applications with our own server instances(Node.js), and using them to render templated views of custom sites which would both consume various API's and also access our own SQL or noSQL backend data services. Students would coluntarily explore topics like user authentication with Passport.js or WebSocket enabled multi-user live interfaces. I dove into a Google Maps Api for my first (one of three) major project and came away with a powerful new tool.
It was at this time that I started to peek at the work my friends had/were doing at the more popular BC variants out here in SF, only to discover that their body of work was tiny in comparison. Often not particularly broad. Nothing wrong with checking out the competition once in a while. Right?
Now, like any programming cohort there was a range of stories, many struggled HARD, and some essentially failed or gave up, but to those that did not, the experience has left them with a significant number of projects across the modern Javascript stack and an overall broad knowledge of how the heck a modern web app is built from the ground to the backend MongoDB non-relational databse. Sorry, bad programming humor.
Ultimately no Bootcamp can singularly gurantee you a great engineering education if you just sit there with your arms crossed waiting for the instructor to automatically funnel the information into your head, you have to do the work. And, not only that, but rise to the occasion to exploit the technology introduced more deeply.
Having that attitude may mean that you will be successful at most any Bootcamp, but this one will introduce you and set the stage for a deep variety of topics that you will want to expand on and explore to secure a mastery.
As a student I realize I may have been an exception with my incoming experience and devotion to extra learning on the side. I would constantly look to expand on the assigned hwrk and develop new and unexpected features not explicitly required in the assignment.
However a number of my peers who I now get to call good friends, had not touched code until starting this program, and through constant devotion to learning and playing with code they have all elevated their skills far beyond what I was able to achieve in my very first half-year of programming knowledge.
So if you are serious. Want to learn a lot about the modern web, and plan to build on what this school offers you to stand out from the busy bootcamp graduate field out here in the SF/Bay Area, then this school will help you prosper!
Best decision I have ever made! Can't wait to get started with my new job on Monday.
Rosa Tadeo of Berkeley Boot Camps
Student Success Manager
Sep 26, 2017
Be aware of this Berkeley coding boot camp. When you interested in the course and contact them, they will call you many thousand times. After you pay the deposit $2500 upfront, be aware that $1000 is no refundable, even you did not go your first day of the class. Also If you have any questions they don't want to answer you on the phone. They will block your phone number and you will directly into voicemail and never call into their admission main line. They reply email also very slow...
Be aware of this Berkeley coding boot camp. When you interested in the course and contact them, they will call you many thousand times. After you pay the deposit $2500 upfront, be aware that $1000 is no refundable, even you did not go your first day of the class. Also If you have any questions they don't want to answer you on the phone. They will block your phone number and you will directly into voicemail and never call into their admission main line. They reply email also very slowly like around 2 or 3 days later. They just want your money. After you pay your deposit they don't care about anything.
Rosa Tadeo of Berkeley Boot Camps
Student Success Manager
Sep 11, 2017
I just finished the UC Berkeley Extension Data Analytics and Visualization 6-month bootcamp and here are my take-aways:
Pros: Awesome and knowledgeable instructor; a LOT is covered so you are constantly learning; you learn data science specific tools, which wouldn't be covered in a fullstack engineering course.
Cons: Perhpas too much is covered and it becomes overwhelming and difficult to explore any particular tool in depth; the cost - it really should be about half of wha...
I just finished the UC Berkeley Extension Data Analytics and Visualization 6-month bootcamp and here are my take-aways:
Pros: Awesome and knowledgeable instructor; a LOT is covered so you are constantly learning; you learn data science specific tools, which wouldn't be covered in a fullstack engineering course.
Cons: Perhpas too much is covered and it becomes overwhelming and difficult to explore any particular tool in depth; the cost - it really should be about half of what I paid ($10k); although you *can* take this class while working full time, it's not super reasonable since you spend every waking hour outside of work doing classwork; there is not enough support - office hours were inconveniently scheduled and the one TA we had who was actually helpful had to stop coming because of work obligations a couple months before the class ended; career services is completely useless because it's not tailored for this particular kind of work, but is offered to all UCB extension classes (so, if you're already a working adult who knows how non-technical interviews work, their "advice" is not new).
In the end, I learned a tertiary amount of information about a lot of different languages and tools, but not enough to work in the industry. I'm planning on attending Hackbright full time over the summer so I can actually get a job because 1) I am now convinced it is super important to just completely immerse yourself in this to learn quickly and well, 2) they have a tuition program that is dependent on your employment in the field, 3) they have a much better support system - you are paired with a mentor, as well as having a regular check-in with an instructor who isn't your own to ensure you're comprehending the material, 4) the program itself seems much more structured and sensical, and 5) really one of the most important things: they want you to find the *right* job, not just "a job."
So, if you're a woman reading this, please look into Hackbright. I really wish someone would've offered me that advice.
Jayson Beagley of Berkeley Boot Camps
Student Success Manager
May 29, 2018
I started attending UC Berkeley Data Analytics program on June 2017 and I am in a first cohort of students for this course. I took this class because I was looking for a part-time course that cover web development, programming and data analytics since I work full-time. This course is Data Analytics course so the class focus mostly on technologies and skills on how to get and store data, how to analyze data, and how to visualize data but you also get learn introduction to other technologi...
I started attending UC Berkeley Data Analytics program on June 2017 and I am in a first cohort of students for this course. I took this class because I was looking for a part-time course that cover web development, programming and data analytics since I work full-time. This course is Data Analytics course so the class focus mostly on technologies and skills on how to get and store data, how to analyze data, and how to visualize data but you also get learn introduction to other technologies too as well as currently hot technologies such as machine learning and big data. This is the first class being offered so I was cautious in the beginning but it surprised me in a good way. The class is very organized and structured in a way that you learn technologies in logical order. I think all the skills I learned are very useful because I’ve seen those in majority of job descriptions when I was googling for jobs online and the mini-projects(homework) that I have to do are also fun and interesting to do because you get to practice what you learn in class and also you get to apply those skills in your own project too.
In term of instructors and TAs, they are all very knowledgeable about what they are teaching. I have to say my Instructor Pavan Katepalli, I have never seen an instructor who is passionate about programming, data analytics and very knowledgeable as well as great at teaching. He really wants to see his students succeed so you can ask question or schedule 1:1 with him anytime on anything. And also, I think all the TA are amazing too because they give really good feedback (they are the one who grade your homework). And you can schedule 1:1 meeting with TAs and tutor or instructor which I think is great if you don’t understand stuffs in class or want to go over more on the materials.
Another best thing about the class is that it is always updating based on you feedback and they apply your feedback fairly quickly too so anything that you think which might enhance your learning they quickly get incorporated into the course.
In Career assistance side, they offer zoom session where you can call in to ask any questions and get answer right away as well as you can do 1:1 with career coach to go over any concern and get advices. Also, they have special classes on interview practice and strategies so I think those are really helpful. And there are career homework which are designed to make you organized and ready for job search, which I think is really good because they give you feedback on how your good resume is or what you needed in linkedin profile to be better and etc... Another thing I like is that they have people who work in the industry come to our class or remotely present share their experience with us, teach us new skills and get to network with them and ask questions.
Overall, for me I am happy with this course because with no background and having no idea where to start on learning about data analytics, I learned a lot from this course both on technologies as well as the analytics field. And also, this is fast paced class so it covers a lot of materials but the class offer a lot of resources so if you are motivated you can learn a lot. Also, it is a lot of fun working with classmates to learn these materials since I learn a lot through my classmates too. I think this class covered a lot of materials and you can be successful if you can review and practice what they teach in the class and also it gives a lot of extra resources to learn on your own too. This class gave me a really good foundation on programming and data analytics so I feel that if there are new skills that needed to learn, I feel that I can learn on my own in the future too. I can’t wait to graduate in a month to continue practicing my new skills and start applying those skills in the data analytics field.
Rosa Tadeo of Berkeley Boot Camps
Student Success Manager
Dec 11, 2017
I am in a unique situation of having previous experience with another full-time bootcamp prior to graduating from this one.
1) Finance: deposit (which is pretty standard for coding bootcamp) + monthly payment (many bootcamps require full payment upon enrolling unless you qualify for special assistance. I would say the tuition cost is roughly mid-range compared to other bootcamps.
2) Curriculum: fairly updated (I love ES6 and MERN). ...
I am in a unique situation of having previous experience with another full-time bootcamp prior to graduating from this one.
1) Finance: deposit (which is pretty standard for coding bootcamp) + monthly payment (many bootcamps require full payment upon enrolling unless you qualify for special assistance. I would say the tuition cost is roughly mid-range compared to other bootcamps.
2) Curriculum: fairly updated (I love ES6 and MERN).
3) Pace of class & teaching approach: This is the biggest difference between my previous bootcamp and this one, in my opinion. Comparing the two, Berkeley bootcamp does more hand-holding to help people ease into the material, whereas my previous bootcamp takes more of a "sink or swim" approach (which has its own merits too). At times I find Berkeley bootcamp similar to a college course instead of a military boot camp, which is to be expected since UC Berkeley Extension oversees/runs this bootcamp. As a result, both the pace and the atmosphere of the class is friendlier to most people, but it is also easier for students to "drop their guard" and top students may get impatient/bored as they wait for the rest of the class to catch up (but they can offer to help struggling students). If you prefer really high intensity/immersion programs that form "band of brothers" then you may be better suited for another bootcamp.
4) Instruction team: I thought the instruction team did a good job considering how wide the student range is. Instructor and TAs are easily available/accessible, although I did have to correct one TA's understanding of Javascript's 'this' keyword.
5) Job Assistance: the activities the career coach asks you to do are all highly valuable. I personally find sessions with the career coach useful only when I specifically tell the coach what I would like to be work on. One weakness of this bootcamp is that it's relatively new and as such does not have an extensive alumni network, especially in the San Francisco Bay Area.
6) Logistics: compare to my previous bootcamp, the Berkeley bootcamp is less organized but that also means the Berkeley bootcamp is more lenient on certain things while still trying new ways to improve the students' experience.
Rosa Tadeo of Berkeley Boot Camps
Student Success Manager
Sep 18, 2017
So this can be a great course for someone but here's the caveats:
So this can be a great course for someone but here's the caveats:
Instructor and TA's were good, but since we were the first full-time cohort for UCB Extension, there were obvious places it could improve. Once a few changes are made, this can definitely be one of the premier coding bootcamps around. The basics are all there for it and the instructors definitely have what it takes to make it into an elite program.
Don't overlook it, just ask a lot of questions and prepare yourself. That being said, you would have to prepare yourself well for any coding bootcamp. You're not going to come in and get something out of it by being half there. You're cheating yourself and wasting money if you think you can just come and expect to get a certificate with half performance.
Rosa Tadeo of Berkeley Boot Camps
Student Success Manager
Sep 18, 2017
I signed up for this bootcamp just a month before it began. My background is in mortgage and real estate, but I had no tech background at all. The course pre work was the only exposure I had to coding. At the end of week 1, I wanted to quit. I was overwhelmed and completely lost! My instructor Jerome(who is awesome) sat me down and told me that if I commit to the course, he would be there to support me and not let me down. Rosa, the program coordinator also assured me that I will be ...
I signed up for this bootcamp just a month before it began. My background is in mortgage and real estate, but I had no tech background at all. The course pre work was the only exposure I had to coding. At the end of week 1, I wanted to quit. I was overwhelmed and completely lost! My instructor Jerome(who is awesome) sat me down and told me that if I commit to the course, he would be there to support me and not let me down. Rosa, the program coordinator also assured me that I will be fully supported if I stayed. Failure wasn't much of an option for me anyway, since I was a newly single mother of 3 (ages 5, 3 and 7 months), so I decided to stick it out.
If your goal is to just get through the program to get the certificate in hopes of landing a job, you are wasting your money. They test your knowledge on the interviews. You have to make this a full time commitment and put in 40,50 hrs a week to get the most out of the program. It's a very intense 12 week program,but you are fully supported by the instructors, TA's and even tutors. I didn't realize that they offer the 2 tutoring sessions per week until week 4. Make sure you are assigned to a tutor asap and take full advantage of all of your resources. What you put in is what you will get out.
The curriculum is strong and solid, but I wish we had spent more time on React and Python instead of Firebase and Handlebars. I am sure they will work this out for future cohorts.
Career Services just started for us, so I don't have a whole lot to say about that now.
Rosa Tadeo of Berkeley Boot Camps
Student Success Manager
Sep 18, 2017
The full-time full stack coding bootcamp at UC Berkeley Extension is a great way to make the switch to web development or software engineering, provided you know what you are getting into and are prepared to put in the work.
First things first: the tuition is more on the affordable side. Easier to afford, but some creature comforts are lacking, AKA don't buy into the marketing materials you'll inevitably see on Facebook, your classroom will not be a computer lab and you will not h...
The full-time full stack coding bootcamp at UC Berkeley Extension is a great way to make the switch to web development or software engineering, provided you know what you are getting into and are prepared to put in the work.
First things first: the tuition is more on the affordable side. Easier to afford, but some creature comforts are lacking, AKA don't buy into the marketing materials you'll inevitably see on Facebook, your classroom will not be a computer lab and you will not have external monitors. The Slack org is not paid for, so save any messages that may be important or you may want to keep for future reference. That being said, the San Francisco campus building itself is quite nice, but there can be limited space to work in larger groups once class is over, as the bootcamp itself doesn't have it's own dedicated space. You only get the classroom during classtime like the other extension classes.
The curriculum is kept fairly up to date for individual concepts. For my cohort it was the MERN stack, and it certainly wasn't stale React either. Some concepts you will not get to spend enough time on, but it's a 3 month bootcamp, so that's pretty common. I would say the most detrimental example of this is at the end with React. In general, an extra half week of React would be awesome. More specifically, learning create-react-app is a great way to get up and running quickly with React apps, but almost never used in production. Actually learning webpack would have been far more relevant IMO.
Above I took care to highlight the word individual. Real world production-level environments will not look like the MERN stack apps you learn and create in class. It's very hard, almost unheard of, to be exposed to that in a bootcamp. So don't be surprised after graduation, it's okay.
There are usually two homework assignments a week, and periodically career services assignments as well. Mix in 3 projects, and that's a lot of stuff to work on. If you're coming into this with zero experience and zero exposure to coding before the pre-bootcamp assignments, you NEED to be prepared to put in 40-50 hours of work, or you will be wasting your money, and letting down your cohort. The "admissions" process is a joke. Don't be fooled into thinking it won't be hard because the application part was cake. It's going to be hard, and you're going to struggle. That being said, there is a fair amount of hand-holding, so for students more comfortable with the material, it can be easy or tempting to not pay attention or look ahead. It can also start to feel like the pace of the class is too slow.
The instructor and TAs I had were great. Jerome does a great job of breaking the material down and does not shy away from coding examples on the spot. Time doesn't always allow for deeper dive conversations into the concepts during class, but if you can bring it up after-hours or in 1-on-1s, there's knowledge to be shared there. My only complaint is sometimes I wish they had clones. Even if I couldn't always get time in-person outside of class (more my fault than theirs), I could almost always find at least one of them on Slack at all odd hours of the night. They genuinely care about the students' well-being and success. If you're someone who likes to get extra instruction, be sure to book those 1-on-1 sessions. Online tutoring through other course alumni is also available.
Outside of the classroom, the organization in my opinion is fairly barebones and thinly staffed, with sometimes little support for the students, the TAs or even the instructor. I never even got the receipt I requested by email. I suspect this goes back to the more affordable tuition I mentioned earlier.
The career support is a mixed bag. Again, the organization here is thinly staffed. The career support directors are amazing. Both of the ones we had were very insightful, charismatic and genuinely driven to help us succeed. The people behind the scenes who review career services assignments were a different story. The feedback I received was shallow, unhelpful, and direct questions would be very vaguely answered. I'm pretty sure it's because each one has to review hundreds of these assignments.
I can't say anything about post-graduation career services support ( I didn't opt-in at that point). However because I completed the assignments to qualify for post-grad support, our career services director still checked in with me from time to time. which I thought was pretty cool.
TL;DR worth the money if you have reasonable expectations about what you're getting and how much effort you have to put in. You can't learn everythign in the classroom, so if you truly want to learn, there's so much more to check out on your own, too.
Jayson Beagley of Berkeley Boot Camps
Regional Director - NorthWest Territory
May 21, 2018
I decided to make a career change from architecture (construction) to full stack development, because technology intrigues and motivates me. The only coding experience I had coming into the bootcamp was from sites like codecademy, udemy, udacity, and edx. I taught myself some programming languages, but nothing in comparison to what I learned in this bootcamp.
If you're approaching this bootcamp just to get a certificate, you won't make it. You need better motivation than that if ...
I decided to make a career change from architecture (construction) to full stack development, because technology intrigues and motivates me. The only coding experience I had coming into the bootcamp was from sites like codecademy, udemy, udacity, and edx. I taught myself some programming languages, but nothing in comparison to what I learned in this bootcamp.
If you're approaching this bootcamp just to get a certificate, you won't make it. You need better motivation than that if you're going to get through the points of frustration you will experience during this course. Take this course seriously to give yourself the best chance out there.
Some concepts may come easy, while other concepts may cause you issues. In the cases you need help, please feel free to reach out to your instructors, tutors, classmates, and any friends that you think could help you. But only reach out after you've tried looking for the solution yourself, and have come across a road block. Expect to put in 40+ hours outside of the classes for homework, research, review, and whatever else you need to do to stay on top of it. If you find yourself ahead in class, keep going. If you find yourself behind, catch up however you need to.
The support from the instructional team and career services is always there. The instructional team has gone above and beyond to make sure we understood the material, but you can only do so much in such a short amount of time. It's up to you to read extra documentation, google a bit more about concepts, and whatever it is you need to do to stay up to date with the material.
I hope you guys find this review helpful. I was trying to right a review that I wish I had when I researched which bootcamp to attend. Good luck!
Rosa Tadeo of Berkeley Boot Camps
Student Success Manager
Sep 18, 2017
Before coming into this bootcamp, I didn't have any experience in coding. I couldn't imagine me writing more than a few lines a code before I started. I also heard it was very challenging going into it and it actually was. BUT, now that I'm down with the program, I've written easily hundreds of lines of code and even though it was more challenging than I expected, I'm glad I went through it.
Not only did I gain valuable professional skills, but, 1. I met great people, 2. Even whe...
Before coming into this bootcamp, I didn't have any experience in coding. I couldn't imagine me writing more than a few lines a code before I started. I also heard it was very challenging going into it and it actually was. BUT, now that I'm down with the program, I've written easily hundreds of lines of code and even though it was more challenging than I expected, I'm glad I went through it.
Not only did I gain valuable professional skills, but, 1. I met great people, 2. Even when things got tough, I pushed myself on a regular basis--but, I wasn't alone, there was plenty from peers, TAs and from David(teacher) and we all came out of it better because of it 3. I now have a great portfolio I can showcase to other professionals and prospective employers.
Special shout out to David Hallinan for his tremendous support, in-depth knowledge of the material, excellent teaching skills and humor. Kept us engaged all the time. Funny guy.
Rosa Tadeo of Berkeley Boot Camps
Student Success Manager
May 02, 2018
Boot Camp Team of Berkeley Boot Camps
Community Team
Jan 20, 2022
How much does Berkeley Boot Camps cost?
Berkeley Boot Camps costs around $14,495. On the lower end, some Berkeley Boot Camps courses like Digital Marketing - Part-Time cost $9,995.
What courses does Berkeley Boot Camps teach?
Berkeley Boot Camps offers courses like Cybersecurity - Part-Time, Data Science and Visualization - Part-Time, Digital Marketing - Part-Time, Full Stack Web Development - Full-Time and 2 more.
Where does Berkeley Boot Camps have campuses?
Berkeley Boot Camps has an in-person campus in San Francisco.
Is Berkeley Boot Camps worth it?
Berkeley Boot Camps hasn't shared alumni outcomes yet, but one way to determine if a bootcamp is worth it is by reading alumni reviews. 70 Berkeley Boot Camps alumni, students, and applicants have reviewed Berkeley Boot Camps on Course Report - you should start there!
Is Berkeley Boot Camps legit?
We let alumni answer that question. 70 Berkeley Boot Camps alumni, students, and applicants have reviewed Berkeley Boot Camps and rate their overall experience a 4.32 out of 5.
Does Berkeley Boot Camps offer scholarships or accept the GI Bill?
Right now, it doesn't look like Berkeley 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 Berkeley Boot Camps reviews?
You can read 70 reviews of Berkeley Boot Camps on Course Report! Berkeley Boot Camps alumni, students, and applicants have reviewed Berkeley Boot Camps and rate their overall experience a 4.32 out of 5.
Is Berkeley Boot Camps accredited?
Yes, UC Berkeley has been fully accredited since 1949 and had its accreditation reaffirmed most recently in 2015 under the Western Association of Schools & Colleges (WASC) pilot institutional review process.
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