
That means creating a student experience that is impactful and affordable. DevMountain's mission has always been to be as accessible as possible. We have now graduated over 1500 students from our program and have refined our instruction, mentorship, curriculum, and experience over and over again to find a process that truly works. I can't agree with that assessment as I love to code though I'd love to work in a very social/collaborative environment.ĭevMountain is confident that we can take anyone who demonstrates a true passion for technology and teach them to code. For reference, I also applied to Tradecraft in San Fransisco and they recommended because I'm a "social butterfly" of sorts that coding probably wouldn't be the best and i should concentrate on business dev/sales. Maybe I'm putting way too much thought into it and it's easier than i'm making it out to be, but I want to cover my bases. My biggest concerns will be financing (i have a low credit score and the lady i talked to said if I had any late payments-which I do, I wouldn't be able to get financing) as well as the pre-course work/code challenges that determine acceptance.

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I'm decently proficient in HTML/CSS and currently learning JavaScript maybe 10-15 hours a week as I'm working full time. In your experience, do most folks who bust their in the program (despite coming from little to no experience programming) have decent luck finding jobs after graduation? I'd hate to put up $15k (including tuition, food, etc) and then not be able to find a job. Im interested in the full time web dev track.
