Founded in 2010, Sabio is a tech training provider offering 13- and 17-week full-time coding bootcamps and a 21-week part-time bootcamp in Los Angeles, Orange County, and online. Sabio specializes in Mobile, Front End, Back End, Source Control, Database, and Development platforms across the full stack, and students can specialize in Node.js or .Net to help jumpstart their careers. By incorporating project-based learning into its curriculum, it offers students a comprehensive experience of all phases of software development. It was founded by tech industry innovators, and it is now taught exclusively by experts from companies such as Fox, Gamefly, Stack Overflow and TMZ.
Prior programming experience is not required, but applicants with prior experience are given a faster track. A technical assessment is available immediately or within four weeks of the 17-week program for full-time students. The application process at Sabio identifies motivated and engaged students from diverse backgrounds. Many past students have advanced degrees in Computer Science, Engineering, Musicology, Psychology, Finance, Mathematics, among others. It is essential that all applicants have a great personality, work ethic, and be able to solve basic logic problems.
Sabio's curriculum prepares students for entry-level developer jobs by incorporating a real-world project for a client and four weeks of career guidance. Prior to starting the intensive bootcamp, students receive four weeks of pre-work conducted by instructors. Every student at Sabio has access to extended mentorship and a five-year professional development program. Sabio instructors have over 100 years combined experience in software engineering. Small class sizes and expert instruction give students an edge when it comes to competing for jobs. A Sabio instructor must be an executive or C-level executive before teaching in the classroom, and must undergo an intensive vetting process. It provides students with a high-level education and a unique real-life perspective that prepares them for a more elevated career path.
A California-approved company, Sabio innovates based on market knowledge, experience, and expertise.
Liliana Monge of Sabio
Gregorio Rojas
Mar 11, 2020
If you are self motivated with confidence to accomplish any task, I would recommend going to a different bootcamp. Reasons, you ask? Here are several top reasons:
1. Leadership - They operate from a sense of entitlement and authoritarianism, they are not there to serve but to be served. In my years of being a leader in other positions, I had never met leaders with such arrogance because they knew how to write code from their 10-15 years of experience, this attitude and action is ...
If you are self motivated with confidence to accomplish any task, I would recommend going to a different bootcamp. Reasons, you ask? Here are several top reasons:
1. Leadership - They operate from a sense of entitlement and authoritarianism, they are not there to serve but to be served. In my years of being a leader in other positions, I had never met leaders with such arrogance because they knew how to write code from their 10-15 years of experience, this attitude and action is a problem in the tech community. Rather than be of service by guiding gently, my cohort and I were met with a response of aloofness. Despite this being a major turnoff and my personal leadership wanting to put this pride to shame, I simply kept focused because google would not fail me in help. On the other hand, my cohort mates were left to wander and struggle through the wall, maybe they had add/adhd and were unable to read documentation like I did(who knows what people are going thru). Ultimately, many of my cohort mates did not really learn effectively and left bootcamp with a shattered sense of confidence ( I felt horrible for them and could not help them during bootcamp as I would have liked due to my own objectives during bootcamp, I cant be the instructor.)
2. Code - As previously stated, entitlement and arrogrance often leads to laziness. There source code was outdated and I believe it had not been updated for 3 years. We were not using the latest and greatest....Which leads you to ask? "If instructors are not coding and updating with the times, what in the world is the leadership doing? Besides getting a full belly.
3. Curriculum - The course program will ultimately teach you what you have to learn as far as basics. If you have the ability to learn quickly, by being given the basics which all coding bootcamps will do; ultimately you will learn how to think like a programmer and get a job. Now for some folks, they do not know how to think through major blockades or obstacles, maybe they do not have the life experience in order to overcome. This is where again leadership comes to play, in effectively helping students to think logically in approaching problem solving. This aspect, which could slow down a project was lacking. If you are not a problem solver, develop that before coming to this bootcamp, by solving your own coding problems with different exisiting free projects like freecodecamp and others.
4. Job - What matters to the reader..."Did you get a job?". I pivoted into being an entrepeneur which I will not disclose as this would allow leadership at this authoritarian bootcamp to discover my identity, I rather live in quiet and peace. However, I am writing this review in response to cohort members who still do not have jobs and are suffering economic struggle without the promised help of 5 year mentorship. That is a outright lie. As for me, I did end up finding something that pays at similar to higher levels outside of tech because of my experience at this disastrous bootcamp. I was able to navigate this negative environment and conquer my goals. If I could solve this disaster I thought, "I can do anything really". I ultimatelly decided a future in tech where I would have to deal with this toxic culture, which is coming to surface here with this review on Sabio but also companies like Google, FB, etc.
Out of my group of 10 plus, only three have come out with a job. Of those three that I know have a job. Two have denounced Sabio not even using them as references.
I leave you with the truth.
Believe the hype? or Truth?
GLTA
Gregorio Rojas of Sabio
Founder
May 10, 2019
Sabio is entirely a product of what you are willing to put in to it. Sabio's curriculum is top notch, and Sabio truly does give you the tools and direction to land multiple offers the first couple weeks out of school (even a Senior position), but please don't make the mistake of thinking that doing the bare minimum is going to guarantee results.
There was a direct correlation between people who studied outside of class, stayed at Sabio late, and/or put...Sabio is entirely a product of what you are willing to put in to it. Sabio's curriculum is top notch, and Sabio truly does give you the tools and direction to land multiple offers the first couple weeks out of school (even a Senior position), but please don't make the mistake of thinking that doing the bare minimum is going to guarantee results.
There was a direct correlation between people who studied outside of class, stayed at Sabio late, and/or put up big WakaTime numbers, to people who landed gigs quickly. You could get away with putting in 40 hours a week, but at the end of the camp you'd be down about 480 hours on the people that put in 80. When you graduate, and compare your best feature to the jQuery you were writing in prework, then consider what you could have accomplished if you put in 480 hours vs 960 over the course of the camp. Even after my first month or so at work professionaly, I was astounded at how linear the relationship is between time spent coding and skill. The direct gains are unlike anything else if ever done. 'Always be coding' sounds sort of funny, but it's true. Follow the curriculum, hit 80 hours a week, and you will certainly have multiple offers. My other advice would be to do as much OOP / C# as possible. It can be a bit too dense to focus on while at Sabio, but once you enter in to the workforce, you will absolutely need to know the general language/structure of OOP, and it will get you much *much* further than being an expert with JS (assuming you're targeting a mid-level position). You may know the hot new frameworks, but I can guarantee you that you will need to touch OOP code sooner or later. It's better to learn it while you're not under pressure, at Sabio, than on the job. React and especially Angular employ extensive OOP JS, as well. In that same vein, don't marry yourself to what Sabio is teaching, in terms of extracurricular education. While I was at Sabio, I used React/React Native/Ado.Net/Express/Node/SQL. In the first month of my new job, I used Angular, AngularJS, and Razor ASP.NET. Sabio *will* teach you how to learn, beyond just teaching you what is in the curriculum, but you should start flexing that muscle before you inevitably have to flex it on the job. Lastly, *before* you start sending out applications, put up a personal website and GitHub. Every single interviewer I talked to said they looked at both, and it takes a day max to get both up and running. It's not an easy road, but you can set your watch on a favorable outcome, if you do the work, and you love the work.Sabio has provided me a professional working environment where I learn and develop applications for our real client (government agency). I would definitely recommend others to attend Sabio.
Just last year I was approaching 20 years of being a developer for the same company. I did not have many other developers around me, and I felt like I was falling behind watching the "outside" world of technology expand. My income was favorable and steady; yet, having to make a change was a must, and I felt like I couldn't waste much time with traditional schooling or even through online courseware.
Learning about coding bootcamps was intriguing as they offered anyone the chanc...
Just last year I was approaching 20 years of being a developer for the same company. I did not have many other developers around me, and I felt like I was falling behind watching the "outside" world of technology expand. My income was favorable and steady; yet, having to make a change was a must, and I felt like I couldn't waste much time with traditional schooling or even through online courseware.
Learning about coding bootcamps was intriguing as they offered anyone the chance to learn about current development frameworks and libraries quickly, and apply those skills going forward. In my search for a local bootcamp, I found Sabio to stand out because it did not make empty promises. It was very honest about laying out expectations and the level of commitment needed for myself and my family to obtain a measure of success.
I selected Sabio based on multiple factors. The main one was their partnership with Antioch University. From this stance, I was able to enroll and participate in the pre-work through Antioch in evening class sessions. This period was what I called, "testing the waters." Whereas, I was testing whether I could I exert the additional energy to drive to class after work, learn about new tools and coding principles within a structured flow, be excited to be there, do the homework exercises, and continue to be pleased with doing this again and again over 12 weeks.
Not only was I energized, I felt exalted. I was able to see the potential for more opportunities, and I couldn't wait to move onward to the immersive program. So, I gave ample notice to my employer that I would be resigning my position to commit wholly to the immersive program later that year. Based on my situation, many of my friends and colleagues thought I was taking an enormous risk; yet, as I continued to convey my impressions about Sabio and to the critical need for quality developers in today's market, they recognized my bold outlook and envied my courage.
The design of the immersive program was one of those other main factors as to why I chose Sabio; it engages you in a real-world project with a real business owner invested in the outcomes of yours and your colleagues' work. So just days after leaving my previous job I felt like I was starting a new one, via the immersive program. From day one we hit the ground running, establishing rapport and finding strengths among our diverse group of other "developers." I viewed our instructors as great team leaders who had extensive knowledge and were always able to balance the notion of providing enough guidance to help you overcome a bug, or understand an intricate design pattern in the code versus just giving away the answer. They would also lead our daily Scrum meetings at the start of the day to promote the principles of Agile development.
As a group of peers, we regularly supported each other through code reviews and publishing. A useful teaching mechanism used in the program is to identify a topic or a recent implementation of the code and take a break within the day to pause and present to the whole group how he/she accomplished it. Most of these times, the instructors were there to guide the discussion; yet, encouraged us to be comfortable with talking openly about our code, There were instances after the instructors went home for the day, we instituted teacher sessions amongst ourselves. On a personal note, that is an example why I miss the high level of collaboration we had.
While my prior years of development positioned me as senior developer among my peers, I considered myself to be at the same standard level in that we all aspire to learn to code well by using the tools and cloud-based resources many employers are seeking candidates with practical experience. And that's an essential takeaway you should understand. Employers and their recruiters are not looking for dabblers in the hottest new trend in tech. They need people with unique skills that come from practical experience based on working in an environment like this; where specific requirements are given to you to tackle and write code to provide a solution.
The intensive part is that you need to put in the time working with your team, your instructors, the project owner, learning new concepts, coding, debugging, and even dreaming in code. All this effort pays off towards the end of the program when you realize how much you have learned and are indeed able to move forward with your career as a developer.
Be aware of the final two weeks of the program. It comes at you fast because this is when you shift from developing all the time to preparing for interviews and job searching. It's a bit jarring as I remember many my of colleagues hating this phase because you start to miss coding. During this period, the program directors, instructors, and the support staff do a great job with providing information and setting expectations, and this is when should follow their recommendations and utilize their time and resources as much as possible because you are establishing a momentum for yourself to manage your job hunt going forward.
Some of your peers will find jobs right away, and some will take longer to find the right match. It all varies, but incredibly the jobs are out there, and Sabio is there as a resource even after ending your program, and you're in your new workplace or if you are not. Sabio allows you to be connected and call upon other past graduates as a community to help with code, discuss new frameworks, share job postings, exchange playlists for coding, or get advice on dealing with your new boss or workmates.
It has been a fantastic journey, and I have new colleagues, and friends to share my challenges and success. A notable achievement includes a 30% pay increase from what I earned before. It is nice to have that; however, my new job setting gives me a better sense of purpose. And I find that to be more fulfilling. In all, I genuinely am reaping the benefits of choosing Sabio. It is no bootcamp, it is a program that provided a transformative experience where it was a distinct honor to have worked within my cohort, and I feel very privileged to be part of the Sabio community.
Selecting a bootcamp should be treated with great care because you are investing money and time towards your next chapter of finding success and being happy. I applaud you for reading through reviews because I too discovered from the reports that there are a number coding bootcamps that fall short in preparing the world in need of quality coders.
Selecting one of Sabio's programs and putting forth the effort to code and collaborate with others will set you on a path with many more opportunities.
I wish you well with finding your new career path. Good hunting.
I'll do my best to give what I feel is a realistic perspective of the situation you're faced with as it relates to Sabio's bootcamp experience. You've pry read several reviews that say stuff like, 'changed my life', 'best experience' or 'best decision of my life' which at the time they wrote those reviews was probably a genuine description of how they felt, but trust me that is far from how you'll feel 95% of the time.
In reality you'll constantly question if you've made a good d...
I'll do my best to give what I feel is a realistic perspective of the situation you're faced with as it relates to Sabio's bootcamp experience. You've pry read several reviews that say stuff like, 'changed my life', 'best experience' or 'best decision of my life' which at the time they wrote those reviews was probably a genuine description of how they felt, but trust me that is far from how you'll feel 95% of the time.
In reality you'll constantly question if you've made a good decision. And with good merit you'll doubt your ability. Its hard, its real hard and if you're not putting in a 100% effort they will kick you out. I've seen it happen (no, I was not personally kicked out). It doesn't matter that you paid $15,000+ to be there they will kick out to maintain the reputation of the organization and future students ability to secure jobs. This however, isn't necessarily a bad thing. If they let every random person pass through no matter thier effort your job seeking efforts would be even harder than they already are.
The thing they dont tell you, that nobody tells you (why would they) in the begining is that when you do start looking for a job the fact that you come from a boot camp will work against you at every turn. So much so that they train you to avoid mentioning that you came from Sabio at all costs. You'll be trained to claim you worked for a "Start-up" and then you'll name the project you worked on. If someone asks what you were paid they suggest you claim you worked for "equity" (meaning "sweat equity", not a total lie but, well....). Obviously they tell you not to lie, what respectable organization would? But they tell you to do everything possible short of lying and in many cases it sure feels like lying (see previous sentence). This obviously makes the job search & interview process even more stressfull than it already is. Not only do you have to try to remember years of coding skills rammed into your head over 3 months you have to tip-toe around the fact that you just left a coding boot camp. This is a fact no matter what CEO response might follow this review.
Also, I think its worth mentioning that Sabio fired 3 of the most talented instructors in the organization. Aaron, Varr and the c# wizard Komron (all from Orange County). This left many students feeling abandoned and justifiably so. These were people they struggled with and gained confidence through and then suddenly they were just gone. This considerably diminished the $15,000 tuition value they paid. Many of us students are still confused as to why this happened. We were given a cryptic explanation of the reason for the instructors dismissal that would never allow me to declare if it were justifiable or not.
I dont mention all this to deter you from enlisting Sabio's services. But I do mention it as a reality check, this is not a short cut. This will be a real life struggle. Having said all that I still believe it is the best boot-camp around but this is not the golden ticket you might percieve it to be from the reviews. They provide just enough experience to scratch the surface, just enough to crack the job door open and then its up to you to do whatever you can to break it down. What you're embarking on is a learning experience that will go on long after you've left Sabio. Sabio is just a very small stepping stone in your attempt to cross the Grand Canyon.
Although they often bad mouth those that have paid for the high value "computer science" degrees they are still the ones that get the most attention with those designations on their resumes. My suggestion if you're young is to take the time to get a computer science degree. Be patient, you're young. It will be worth, trust me. If you can afford it, blow your money on Stanford, sure.... why not if you can afford it??
If not, go to a junior college and take a few years to get just an AS with a computer science emphasis or go get a bunch of computer science certifications. THEN, when you've had enough of that come back to Sabio and get some real world development experience. With a computer science degree and the coding experience of Sabio you would be in a really good place. If thats not an option, bite the bullet and be prepared to jump in the fire.
One last thing I want to mention. Pre-work is nothing like the immersive cohort. The cohort experience isn't just about being able to code. Its about being able to code and then get up in front of everyone and communicate what you did in terms you've never heard before that you have no idea if you're even saying correctly. You'll be required to stand in front of everyone, every single day and explain what you're working on, demo your code every week and on special occassions in front of A LOT of people. If you get stage fright, good luck. Your experience may become less about coding and more about how to navigate the anxieties that come with public speaking. It most likely will not be a fun experience but Sabio will prepare you better than any other boot camp out there. Good luck whatever you do.
***My review is anonymous because I do not want to be contacted by anyone at Sabio that may recognize my name. I did not write the review for recognition. I was a recent student that completed the full program and this is my real account of what I experienced. I was not kicked out. I have no incentive to discredit Sabio and any response by Sabio to the contrary is completely false. I've applied to a few hundred positions and received approximately 5 interviews. I have a tentative job offer I am considering.
Sabio was a great experience for me and coming out of the program I landed a position that paid me way more than I was asking for
Employed in-field | 82.0% |
Full-time employee | 82.0% |
Full-time apprenticeship, internship or contract position | 0.0% |
Short-term contract, part-time, or freelance | 0.0% |
Started a new company or venture after graduation | 0.0% |
Not seeking in-field employment | 3.0% |
Employed out-of-field | 5.0% |
Continuing to higher education | N/A |
Not seeking a job for health, family, or personal reasons | N/A |
Still seeking job in-field | 10.0% |
Could not contact | 0.0% |
Course Report is excited to offer an exclusive Sabio scholarship for $5000 off tuition!
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How much does Sabio cost?
Sabio costs around $15,000. On the lower end, some Sabio courses like Node.js Full Stack with React cost $9,500.
What courses does Sabio teach?
Sabio offers courses like Downtown LA ASP.Net // C# Full Stack With React, Full Stack Node.js with React, Full Stack Weekday - REMOTE, Irvine ASP.Net // C# Full Stack With React and 2 more.
Where does Sabio have campuses?
Sabio has in-person campuses in Los Angeles, Orange County, and Riverside. Sabio also has a remote classroom so students can learn online.
Is Sabio worth it?
The data says yes! In 2016, Sabio reported a 93% graduation rate, a median salary of $65,000, and 82% of Sabio alumni are employed. The data says yes! In 2018, Sabio reported a 97% graduation rate, a median salary of $72,500, and 79% of Sabio alumni are employed.
Is Sabio legit?
We let alumni answer that question. 255 Sabio alumni, students, and applicants have reviewed Sabio and rate their overall experience a 4.53 out of 5.
Does Sabio offer scholarships or accept the GI Bill?
Yes, Course Report is excited to offer an exclusive Sabio scholarship for $5000 off tuition! Sabio accepts the GI Bill!
Can I read Sabio reviews?
You can read 255 reviews of Sabio on Course Report! Sabio alumni, students, and applicants have reviewed Sabio and rate their overall experience a 4.53 out of 5.
Is Sabio accredited?
Sabio was approved by the State of California Bureau for Private Post Secondary Education in July of 2016. We pay our annual license fees to BPPE and we submit annual Student Performance Fact Sheet to the state of ca every Dec.
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