MIT xPRO offers a 32-week, online Professional Certificate in Coding: Full Stack Development with MERN bootcamp. The bootcamp requires a time commitment of 15-20 hours per week. Bootcamp students will learn to build, test, and deploy web applications using the MERN stack and APIs, and learn how to set up continuous integration and continuous delivery pipelines to deploy a React application. Students develop a GitHub portfolio of their work to present to potential employers.
No prerequisites are required to apply for the MIT xPRO Full Stack Development with MERN bootcamp, but a capacity for technical concepts is recommended.
This program includes video lectures and coding demos from MIT faculty, personalized feedback on assignments and projects, mentorship from experienced industry professionals, and career coaching during and after the program. Bootcamp students will also receive soft skill instruction, including personal brand building, understanding the roles and workflow of Agile development, and how to communicate technical concepts to non-technical audiences.
MIT xPRO Full Stack Development with MERN bootcamp is graded as pass/fail. Students who receive at least 75% cumulatively will receive a verified digital certificate of completion from MIT xPro. Financing options including deferred payments may be available.
MIT xPRO Professional Certificate in Coding: Full Stack Development with MERN bootcamp is powered by Emeritus.
Bootcamp students will learn to build, test, and deploy web applications using the MERN stack and APIs, build, test, and deploy a front end web application using React, and to set up continuous integration and continuous delivery pipelines to deploy a React application. Students develop a GitHub portfolio of their work to present to potential employers.
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Lending partners: Ascent Funding, Sallie Mae, Knoma and Eduvanz.Installment plans availableLear more here.
Tuition Plans
We offer flexible and transparent payment options through our partners—Climb Credit, Sallie Mae, and Ascent Funding
Getting In
Minimum Skill Level
No previous experience required to apply, but a capacity for technical concepts is recommended.
For over two decades, technology has been changing what organizations look like and how they do business. Across countries, industries, and organizational functions, the impact of digitalization has been immense. However, after 2020 and the global pandemic, there is no doubt now that the future will be driven in a big way by software and coding.
Earlier, organizations were waking up to the need to hire web developers, software engineers, and other technology workers to eventually digitalize their organizations. Today, firms are looking to hire many skilled coders to leverage the power of technology for continued business relevance and profitability.
One of the most sought-after roles is that of a full stack developer. These coders handle entire product buildouts, including development on software that the client interacts with (front end) and the coding and structuring related to servers (back end). Full stack developers deliver value, agility, and flexibility to an organization’s infrastructure.
Previously, developers worried about industry trends and graduating on time to meet them. After 2020, given the surge of positions, the only obstacle to getting hired is the time taken to qualify. With the accelerated MIT xPRO online learning program, this is no longer an issue.
The MIT xPRO Professional Certificate in Coding is an immersive full stack coding program offering personalized feedback, live daily office hours with course leaders, and the opportunity to develop a GitHub portfolio for potential employers.
MIT xPRO’s online learning programs showcase industry-aligned content from world-renowned experts to make learning accessible anytime, anywhere and solve this challenge for developing technical professionals. The programs combine exclusive content from MIT’s world-renowned faculty with tailored support and hands-on learning activities.
MIT xPRO is collaborating with online education provider Emeritus to deliver this online course through a dynamic, interactive, digital learning platform. This course leverages MIT xPRO's thought leadership in engineering and management practice developed over years of research, teaching, and practice.
Financing
Deposit
N/A
Financing
Lending partners: Ascent Funding, Sallie Mae, Climb, Knoma and Eduvanz.Installment plans available.Lear more here.
Tuition Plans
We offer flexible and transparent payment options through our partners—Climb Credit, Sallie Mae, and Ascent Funding.
Getting In
Minimum Skill Level
No previous experience required to apply, but a capacity for technical concepts is recommended.
Cyberattacks are becoming more frequent, complex, and targeted, collectively costing organizations billions of dollars every year. This is why cybersecurity is one of the fastest growing industries in the U.S. as every year more companies and government agencies are seeking to hire cybersecurity engineers with the specialized technical skills needed to defend mission-critical computer systems, networks, cloud applications, and more against cyberattacks.
Now there's an easier way to acquire this versatile skill set that so many employers are seeking. Enroll today in the MIT xPRO Professional Certificate in Cybersecurity program, which focuses on both the defensive and offensive aspects of the technology. It also includes personalized feedback from course leaders, insights from guest speakers, career coaching, mentorship, and the opportunity to create a capstone network development project for a job portfolio.
Financing
Deposit
N/A
Financing
Lending partners available, including Ascent, Climb, Sallie Mae, and othersLearn more here.
Tuition Plans
We offer flexible and transparent payment options through our partners—Climb Credit, Sallie Mae, and Ascent Funding.
As data grows even more integral to business, it’s easy to see why data engineer was ranked as the fastest growing tech occupation in 2020. The need for data engineers who can build out the infrastructure necessary to put data to work is intensifying, and the MIT xPRO Professional Certificate in Data Engineering can help you meet this demand with job-ready data engineering skills that offer a competitive edge in the marketplace.
The MIT xPRO Professional Certificate in Data Engineering is an immersive 6–month program that’s designed to provide job-ready, in-demand data engineering skills and a competitive edge in the marketplace. Through an exploration of core concepts, tools, techniques and best practices, participants will learn data engineering essentials, from building an effective data architecture and data warehouses to designing data models, streamlining data processing, automating data pipelines, data wrangling, and big data engineering. They can also take advantage of personalized feedback, live weekly office hours with course leaders, and the opportunity to develop a GitHub portfolio for potential employers.
Financing
Deposit
N/A
Financing
Lending partners available including Ascent, Climb, Sallie Mae, and Knoma (UK), and others.Learn more here.
Tuition Plans
We offer flexible and transparent payment options through our partners—Climb Credit, Sallie Mae, and Ascent Funding.
Games are timeless, universal, and capable of crossing boundaries. Advances in technology have contributed to a changing landscape of the gaming market. New applications are creating the need for a generation of game design professionals who not only know how to design, develop, and launch games that foster connection and resonate with a diverse audience — but also have a sense for how to scope projects, manage products, and work effectively with teams.
Developed by experts from the MIT Game Lab, MIT xPRO’s Professional Certificate in Game Design has been created to meet the growing demand for game designers who are ready to take on the challenges of today’s market. The program encompasses the skills and best practices of modern game design, project management, and project scoping and prepares learners to design games that are culture conscious and accessible to larger audiences within society.
Financing
Deposit
N/A
Financing
Immediate repayment, interest-only repayment, and deferred payment options are available. Click here to know more
Tuition Plans
We offer flexible and transparent payment options through our partner Climb Credit.
Getting In
Minimum Skill Level
Participants should have experience with basic coding concepts. Some assignments require the use of the Unity game engine (C#).
Project-based industries are poised for historic expansion and so is the need for technical project managers trained to lead complex software and hardware projects to completion.
In North America, the Project Management Institute expects more than 128,000 job openings for project managers (PMs) each year through 2030. Nearly 70% of organizations say they are placing a high priority on hiring PMs with technical skills.
If you’re ready to create clarity, work through challenges to find smart solutions, and lead the teams behind the scenes of software and hardware development, MIT xPRO's Technical Project Management program is for you.
This program is organized into three main sections focused on the specialized skills for technical project leadership and a range of practical PM methods applicable in both a software development and a non-software environment.
Financing
Deposit
N/A
Financing
Lending Partners available, including Climb Credit, Ascent, and Sallie Mae
Tuition Plans
Installment plans available
Getting In
Minimum Skill Level
A minimum of a bachelor's degree and about one year of prior project management experience is recommended.
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Anonymous
Freelance Web Developer • Student • Professional Certificate in Coding: Full Stack Development with MERN • Online
Apr 10, 2022
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Might have been better before materials became outdated...
To get a better idea of the current situation of this Bootcamp click the box to read the reviews of MIT XPro Bootcamp by "most recent first." You will notice that most of the bad reviews are recent. There is a reason for this. I am about 2 months away from finishing this slog of a Bootcamp. Here is my experience:
Prior to enrolling in the MIT xPro Bootcamp, I had taken a coding bootcamp with SheCodes (highly recommended). With SheCodes, I learned HTML, CSS, JavaScript, responsive ...
To get a better idea of the current situation of this Bootcamp click the box to read the reviews of MIT XPro Bootcamp by "most recent first." You will notice that most of the bad reviews are recent. There is a reason for this. I am about 2 months away from finishing this slog of a Bootcamp. Here is my experience:
Prior to enrolling in the MIT xPro Bootcamp, I had taken a coding bootcamp with SheCodes (highly recommended). With SheCodes, I learned HTML, CSS, JavaScript, responsive development, and React. Enough to start freelancing as a web developer. I should have just taken what I learned with SheCodes and made projects and a portfolio and started applying for jobs. But, instead, I thought I needed a "full-stack" experience and I trusted MIT to deliver that.
Both SheCodes and MIT are pre-recorded video lessons with help available via Slack (SheCodes), a forum (MIT), or email (both). The differences are that MIT is a graded course and is structured more like an online college class. New work is released every week and you have one week to finish it and turn it in for grading. You cannot make up late work. There is no feedback provided for your weekly work. Most of the work is on a sandbox platform NextTech which has its share of issues and is notorious for having bugs and rejecting good code and passing bad code. Because of this, you had no idea if what you turned in was actually good or not (no feedback). The only feedback you receive is for your portfolio projects (there are 3 of these) and this is the one (and only) strong part of the course.
SheCodes on the other hand had soft deadlines. You could finish work on your own time, but you could get extensions if you needed them. You received feedback on your work and if you did a good job, you passed on to the next portion of the class. No grades and lots of support. You leave SheCodes with some great projects for your portfolio. So in a way, MIT and SheCodes are similar...pre-recorded video, independent learning, making projects for your portfolio. Looking back, I learned much better with the SheCodes method and I would have saved thousands of dollars if I hadn't been so sold on the idea of moving on to a full-stack bootcamp with the MIT name. Having had a great experience with SheCodes, I was shocked at how poorly the MIT course was put together.
Here is where the MIT course gets VERY stressful. Because work is graded (you must achieve 75% to pass the course and receive a certificate) and there is a hard due date, you are dependent on timely support to learn the material and turn it in on time. This makes the performance of your official "learning facilitator" extremely vital. Your learning facilitator is the ONLY actual live human who helps you during this course. The MIT professors show up on pre-recorded videos only. There are other people who are "support" staff available via email but they often just refer you back to your learning facilitator. The week's graded work comes out on a Thursday. Our learning facilitator was only available to meet us live online on Tuesdays. The work is due Thursday morning. So...if you struggled with any part of the course, you only had a day and a half to get help and then hopefully complete your assignments correctly and turn them in. If you missed the live help (office hours) then you had to wait for the recording to be posted which usually happened the next day (giving you less than a day to finish all of your work). And there was a lot of graded work. Way too much to do in one full day. Hope you don't work on Wednesdays! You'll need that whole day to do a week's worth of work.
This is where it is important to note that most of the poor reviews of this bootcamp are from the most recent cohorts. The main reason for this is that most of the pre-recorded content of the class (the part with the MIT professors) is now outdated. As the course itself states "software changes rapidly" and in the last two segments of the course, you can count on most of the instruction to be almost useless since all the steps they are demonstrating no longer work. The frustrating part of this however is that you have no idea whether your code isn't working because of a small error on your part or because they are having you code with outdated methods. You will spend countless hours trying to figure out if it is you or the course. Then Tuesday will roll around and you will finally get your answer that "oops, that instruction is outdated" and by then you will only have one and a half days to do it all over again with the proper instruction and turn it in for grading.
The career support is just a series of pre-recorded videos about making your resume and portfolio. Nothing that you can't find for free on YouTube. In my own experience, I wouldn't have passed this class (due to the issues stated above) if I hadn't already taken the SheCodes courses and knew my way around Google and YouTube to find free content.
In the end, having the MIT name on my CV will be a nice parting gift, but if I had to do it again, I would not pay nearly $7k for this poorly designed and delivered course. I am a former teacher and there are so many ways this course has failed basic instructional design and pedagogy methods. Save yourself lots of money and look into Nucamp or SheCodes. I have a feeling that most of these college-affiliated courses are the same. And your experience and success in them will be entirely dependent on that one human who is employed to actually help you learn.
If the content of the MIT course was up to date, then we could have handled a poor support system. If the support system was robust and available when we needed it, then we could have handled out-of-date content. But, give us out-of-date material and poor support, and you have 32 weeks of frustration, little learning, and the MIT course in a nutshell.
We’re sorry to hear that this program didn’t meet your expectations. Our mission is to help you build the skills you need to take your career to the next level. All our programs undergo thorough review for content quality and rigor, and the Next Tech tool is consistently updated when changes occur to code bases and exercises need to be updated. Students are also able to get extensions whenever they request them. While this is a self-directed program, all participants have access to personalized support and live office hours sessions, and it sounds like you may not be taking full advantage of that support. Learning facilitators are not just available on Tuesdays; you can message directly via Support anytime to request help. We also provide career coaches and success coaches who are available for 1:1 appointments anytime. We encourage you to reach out to both your learning facilitator and student success coach with your concerns. You may also contact mit@emeritus.org to discuss how we can improve your experience and help ensure that you achieve your learning goals. We appreciate your feedback, as it helps us improve the experience for all future learners in our program. Thank you,
Erin Rosenblatt
VP of Professional Certificates, Emeritus
Anonymous
Student • Professional Certificate in Coding: Full Stack Development with MERN • Online
Feb 11, 2022
Overall Experience
Instructors
Curriculum
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N/A
Not begginer friendly at all.
Currently about 7 weeks in and I have to say this is not very beginner friendly at all. I wouldn't believe anything the student advisors tell you about this course either as they just want to sign up as many people as possible. It is all videos that basically tell you what to do and not how. You are supposed to figure out how to code on your own basically and complete the assignments, so I don't know why they think they can charge so much for this course. It is obvious the only people in...
Currently about 7 weeks in and I have to say this is not very beginner friendly at all. I wouldn't believe anything the student advisors tell you about this course either as they just want to sign up as many people as possible. It is all videos that basically tell you what to do and not how. You are supposed to figure out how to code on your own basically and complete the assignments, so I don't know why they think they can charge so much for this course. It is obvious the only people in my group that are successful have at least some background in computer science or coding. The learning facilitators have been very helpful but there is only 1-2 hours of office hours a week where you can ask questions, you can not contact the actual professors from the videos at all. They recommend you take a free intro to javascript course before it starts and if you don't I have a hard time seeing anyone being able to get through this course with out some basics on your own.
We’re sorry to hear that this program hasn’t met your expectations. 90% of our students tell us that their learning objectives were met or exceeded, and that is a statistic that we are proud of. We strive to develop our programs to meet the needs of individuals at various levels of proficiency; however, we do recommend that true beginners spend some additional time practicing these concepts, as they are quite tricky to learn for the first time, especially in an accelerated program such as this. All participants in this program have access to personalized support and live office hours sessions, and we want to ensure that you’re getting the support you need. It sounds like you are enrolled in a current cohort, and if that’s the case, we encourage you to reach out to your learning facilitator or student success coach for assistance. Please take advantage of the team of people who are here to support you. That’s our job, and we want to help you succeed. You may also contact mit@emeritus.org to discuss how we can improve your experience and help ensure that you achieve your learning goals. We appreciate your feedback, as it helps us improve the experience for all future learners in our program.
Thank you,
Erin Rosenblatt
VP of Professional Certificates, Emeritus
Anonymous
Director of Education • Student • Professional Certificate in Coding: Full Stack Development with MERN • Online
Feb 08, 2022
Overall Experience
Instructors
Curriculum
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Full-Stack Development
This program is one of most ineffective learning experiences I’ve ever had. As a long-time educator and curriculum developer, I’ve reached the conclusion that there had been little to no thought towards healthy pedagogy or scope and sequence. Many of the materials such as video tutorials are years-back outdated and, so, students run into multiple errors trying to figure them out. There is virtually no consistent support other than reaching out to other peers all the time. Limited learnin...
This program is one of most ineffective learning experiences I’ve ever had. As a long-time educator and curriculum developer, I’ve reached the conclusion that there had been little to no thought towards healthy pedagogy or scope and sequence. Many of the materials such as video tutorials are years-back outdated and, so, students run into multiple errors trying to figure them out. There is virtually no consistent support other than reaching out to other peers all the time. Limited learning. Do NOT fall for the name! Not worth it!
We’re sorry to hear that this program didn’t meet your expectations. Our mission is to help you build the skills you need to take your career to the next level, and all our programs undergo thorough review for content quality and rigor. While this is a self-directed program, all participants have access to personalized support and live office hours sessions, and we want to ensure that you’re getting the support you need. If you are enrolled in a current cohort, we encourage you to reach out to your learning facilitator or student success coach with your concerns. You may also contact mit@emeritus.org to discuss how we can improve your experience and help ensure that you achieve your learning goals. We appreciate your feedback, as it helps us improve the experience for all future learners in our program.
Thank you,
Erin Rosenblatt
VP of Professional Certificates, Emeritus
Anonymous
Student • Professional Certificate in Coding: Full Stack Development with MERN • Online
Apr 27, 2021
Overall Experience
Instructors
Curriculum
Job Assistance
MIT xPro Bootcamp
Overall, this bootcamp has shown the concepts that are important using the mern stack, but there is a lot of information that is not explained very well and the students are expected to tackle problems that are quite challenging. For those with prior experience to coding, this bootcamp is great, but with none before, I would suggest a different one.
Course Report · Course Report Coding Bootcamp News Roundup - March 2021
We’re wrapping up March, which is Women’s History Month, so it’s only appropriate to share media coverage about the women-in-tech initiatives and scholarships at coding bootcamps. Over at the Course Report office, we published our Alumni Outcomes & Demographics Report in March and it offered key insights into how...
Based on 70+ MIT xPRO | Bootcamps alumni reviews on Course Report, alumni praise the comprehensive curriculum, hands-on projects, and mentorship from industry professionals. In particular, reviewers rate the Professional Certificate in Coding: Full Stack Development with MERN very highly. One review highlights, "The course design was well-structured and the practical, hands-on approach to using Python was extremely effective." However, some reviews suggest that the programs might be challenging for beginners without prior programming experience.
MIT xPRO | Bootcamps costs around $9,500. On the lower end, some MIT xPRO | Bootcamps courses like Professional Certificate in Coding: Full Stack Development with MERN cost $6,950.
MIT xPRO | Bootcamps teaches students Online in a remote classroom.
Is MIT xPRO | Bootcamps worth it?
MIT xPRO | Bootcamps hasn't shared alumni outcomes yet, but one way to determine if a bootcamp is worth it is by reading alumni reviews. 148 MIT xPRO | Bootcamps alumni, students, and applicants have reviewed MIT xPRO | Bootcamps on Course Report - you should start there!
Is MIT xPRO | Bootcamps legit?
We let alumni answer that question. 148 MIT xPRO | Bootcamps alumni, students, and applicants have reviewed MIT xPRO | Bootcamps and rate their overall experience a 4.51 out of 5.
Does MIT xPRO | Bootcamps offer scholarships or accept the GI Bill?
You can read 148 reviews of MIT xPRO | Bootcamps on Course Report! MIT xPRO | Bootcamps alumni, students, and applicants have reviewed MIT xPRO | Bootcamps and rate their overall experience a 4.51 out of 5.
Is MIT xPRO | Bootcamps accredited?
While bootcamps must be approved to operate, accreditation is relatively rare. MIT xPRO | Bootcamps doesn't yet share information about their accreditation status.
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