I've been reading and calling eight hours per day for two weeks straight in an effort to choose the correct camp. I sincerely looked at MiT xPro, and have ruled it out of my choices. Previous attendees of MiT xPro have detailed their experiences in the program on Reddit and report to be unhappy with their experience. It appears many universities "sell" their name to boot camp providers and operate as an extension program. The accounts and reviews have not been great, even when operating as an extension of the most respected colleges. I'm not going to join any program involving a university, because the handful of companies that actually run these programs do not provide the education and service attendees expected. After all my searching, I feel there is a lot of shadiness in the boot camp world. This isn't to say there aren't fantastic camps that alumni are more than happy with. CIRR.ORG is really great resource, although reporting seems to have stopped since 2020. Reading their data will indirectly tip you off to some of the dishonesty in the industry. One example of dishonesty by schools is the practice of hiring last cohort grads to teach the next cohort in order to inflate the post-graduation job placement numbers. This is my first Reddit post after lurking for years. I hope to contribute meaningfully to the coding community at large. Answer from CapybaraTruffles on reddit.com
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MIT xPRO
executive-ed.xpro.mit.edu › professional-certificate-coding
Full Stack Coding Online Course | MIT xPRO Coding Bootcamp
The Professional Certificate in Coding from MIT xPRO is a full stack web development program that equips you with the in-demand skills to work with JavaScript, React, Node.js, MongoDB, and Next.js.
🌐
MIT xPRO
xpro.mit.edu › courses › course-v1:xPRO+PCCx+R1
Professional Certificate in Coding: Full Stack Development with MERN
In this competitive tech job market, ... With MERN is designed to arm professionals with the required software and web development skills and a GitHub portfolio they can share with potential employers....
Discussions

Is MIT XPRo worth it?
I've been reading and calling eight hours per day for two weeks straight in an effort to choose the correct camp. I sincerely looked at MiT xPro, and have ruled it out of my choices. Previous attendees of MiT xPro have detailed their experiences in the program on Reddit and report to be unhappy with their experience. It appears many universities "sell" their name to boot camp providers and operate as an extension program. The accounts and reviews have not been great, even when operating as an extension of the most respected colleges. I'm not going to join any program involving a university, because the handful of companies that actually run these programs do not provide the education and service attendees expected. After all my searching, I feel there is a lot of shadiness in the boot camp world. This isn't to say there aren't fantastic camps that alumni are more than happy with. CIRR.ORG is really great resource, although reporting seems to have stopped since 2020. Reading their data will indirectly tip you off to some of the dishonesty in the industry. One example of dishonesty by schools is the practice of hiring last cohort grads to teach the next cohort in order to inflate the post-graduation job placement numbers. This is my first Reddit post after lurking for years. I hope to contribute meaningfully to the coding community at large. More on reddit.com
🌐 r/codingbootcamp
35
26
February 10, 2022
WANTED: Advice/ Reviews on MIT Professional Certificate for Full Stack Development with MERN
MIT jumped the bandwagon of making $$ off of the bootcamp trend (CalTech does that with Simplilearn). More on reddit.com
🌐 r/learnprogramming
21
19
November 13, 2020
MIT xPRO

I’m currently enrolled in week 2 and really struggling does it get easier or should I consider dropping it and trying to learn it on my own

More on reddit.com
🌐 r/codingbootcamp
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6
September 23, 2021
Should I find a coding crash course/bootcamp or just self teach and build my own portfolio?
I am a mostly self taught dev, my current position title is senior software engineer. So my advice might be biased to the path I took... I'd skip the certificate especially at that price tag, as others pointed out it's MIT in name only. how valuable a certificate is It might get you past an HR screen, but that is really about it, most of the job hunt benefit from a bootcamp comes from connections the bootcamp has, or their job placement programs etc. I've been involved in the hiring of a number of devs over my career, speaking from that experience I can tell you when I get a resume for a jr dev, first thing I look for is a github link, and if not then a personal website portfolio link. After I've looked at there code I go back and see what they list as proficiency, degrees, and programs. For more mid level jobs, it's all about that portfolio and code sample/challenges. So basically build up a good portfolio, include all the silly and basic examples you do as you lean, it helps really show how you learn and grow. A repo with one project that is super polished but only one commit is far less interesting to me in terms of hiring, than a repo with dozens or more commits and a kinda polished project. similarly directed and thorough programs You can take most of the MIT CS program online for free via MIT OpenCourseWare there is also this great guide . In terms of where to start, Python is a great first language, and it's what the MIT program uses IIRC.as you go along and need to learn a specific skill, Udemy can be useful but the courses tend to be very hit or miss. If you need the defined course structure to learn they can be a great tool but if you can learn on your own there are plenty of free quality resources out there. TL:DR Start learning now, don't pay someone for a certificate. Build a portfolio of all your work in github, iterate over the same project as you learn new things. I hope that helps! More on reddit.com
🌐 r/learnprogramming
13
8
November 16, 2021
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MIT xPRO
executive-ed.xpro.mit.edu › courses › coding
Learn Coding Online | Online Coding Programs with MIT xPRO
MIT xPRO · Professional Certificate in Coding: Full Stack Development with MERN · 32 weeks | online · MIT xPRO · Professional Certificate in Coding - For Women · 32 weeks | online · MIT xPRO · Professional Certificate in Coding: Full Time · 4 Months | Online ·
🌐
Reddit
reddit.com › r/codingbootcamp › is mit xpro worth it?
r/codingbootcamp on Reddit: Is MIT XPRo worth it?
February 10, 2022 -

Is MIT XPro worth it?

I’m dropping a note to say I’m dropping a lot of money and time into this coding program. I opened the ‘0-1 week’ and I’m seeing nothing but free online resources jammed into one section with no instruction or structure. Basically screams, “teach yourself”. I’m nervous to continue on because I need the structure and practice as I’m completely new to tech. I have decided to leave healthcare (after this pandemic) and this is completely new to me. I’d love to choose a boot camp where I’ll learn the best so I’m better prepared for real world hands on experience. Any insight from others would be greatly appreciated!

Top answer
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I've been reading and calling eight hours per day for two weeks straight in an effort to choose the correct camp. I sincerely looked at MiT xPro, and have ruled it out of my choices. Previous attendees of MiT xPro have detailed their experiences in the program on Reddit and report to be unhappy with their experience. It appears many universities "sell" their name to boot camp providers and operate as an extension program. The accounts and reviews have not been great, even when operating as an extension of the most respected colleges. I'm not going to join any program involving a university, because the handful of companies that actually run these programs do not provide the education and service attendees expected. After all my searching, I feel there is a lot of shadiness in the boot camp world. This isn't to say there aren't fantastic camps that alumni are more than happy with. CIRR.ORG is really great resource, although reporting seems to have stopped since 2020. Reading their data will indirectly tip you off to some of the dishonesty in the industry. One example of dishonesty by schools is the practice of hiring last cohort grads to teach the next cohort in order to inflate the post-graduation job placement numbers. This is my first Reddit post after lurking for years. I hope to contribute meaningfully to the coding community at large.
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My husband is about 3/4th of of the way through this course and he hates it and regrets spending the money. He says the material is outdated, poorly explained, and riddled with errors. Look into freeCodeCamp and Full Stack Open through the University of Helsinki- they are free and have almost exact same content with higher quality tutorials. Other members of his cohort have expressed similar feelings about the bootcamp- that this program is borderline scammy because of how mediocre the material is for the price, especially when there are so many free resources available. It's disappointing that such a prestigious school is allowing their name to be used in a cash grab.
🌐
MIT xPRO
xpro.mit.edu › courses › course-v1:xPRO+PCCFTx
MIT xPRO | Professional Certificate in Coding: Full Time
This program is designed to prepare you to enter the job market as an entry-level full-stack developer.
🌐
MIT xPRO
executive-ed.xpro.mit.edu › home › mit xpro
Professional Certificate in Coding: Full Time - MIT xPRO
Designed using cutting-edge research in the neuroscience of learning, MIT xPRO programs are application-focused, helping professionals to build their skills on the job.
🌐
Quora
quora.com › How-good-is-MITs-xPRO-Professional-certificate-in-Coding-Full-Stack-development-with-MERN-Is-it-worth-it
How good is MIT's xPRO Professional certificate in Coding: Full Stack development with MERN? Is it worth it? - Quora
Answer (1 of 4): This professional certificate is composed of 3 courses, which cover the entire MERN stack, in addition to Cloud and DevOps: 1. HTML/JS/CSS 2. Frontend development with React 3. Backend development with Node.js TL;DR Overall I can say I very much enjoyed it and can recommend it. ...
Find elsewhere
🌐
SwitchUp
switchup.org › bootcamps › mit-xpro
MIT xPRO Reviews | SwitchUp
March 9, 2026 - With MIT xPRO’s Professional Certificate in Coding, you’ll learn in-demand skills from a name that employers know and trust. Subjects: CSS, HTML, Github, MongoDB, Product Mgmt, React.js, Node.js, Express.js, JavaScript, Back-End Web Development, ...
🌐
Zendesk
xpro.zendesk.com › hc › en-us › articles › 360054179392-Professional-Certificate-in-Coding-Full-Stack-Development-with-MERN
Professional Certificate in Coding: Full Stack Development with MERN – MIT xPRO Support Center
July 7, 2023 - The MIT xPRO program "Professional Certificate in Coding: Full Stack Development with MERN" is designed for individuals at different stages of their careers who want to gain skills in coding and en...
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MIT xPRO
executive-ed.xpro.mit.edu › courses
Online Courses at MIT xPRO | View All Online Programs
MIT xPRO · Professional Certificate in Coding: Full Time · 4 Months | Online · MIT xPRO · Professional Certificate in Coding: Full Stack Development with MERN · 32 weeks | online · MIT xPRO · Professional Certificate in Coding - For Women · 32 weeks | online ·
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Course Report
coursereport.com › schools › mit-xpro-bootcamps
MIT xPRO | Bootcamps Reviews | Course Report
MIT xPRO offers online Professional Certificates in Full Stack Development with MERN (26 weeks), Cybersecurity (24 weeks), Data Science and Data Analytics (24 weeks), and Technical Project Management (21 weeks). The bootcamps require a time commitment of 15-20 hours per week, and are designed for recent graduates, career changers, and professionals looking to upskill their career.
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CareerKarma
careerkarma.com › schools › mit-xpro
MIT xPRO Reviews: Cost, Courses, and Outcomes
Another MIT xPRO bootcamp review ... learn to code with MIT xPRO, especially since coding languages like SQL, Python, JavaScript, and CSS are taught by leading industry experts....
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MIT xPRO
executive-ed.xpro.mit.edu › home
Online Programs | Build Unsurpassed Skills in AI, Coding, Robotics, VR, and More
MIT xPRO offers short online programs and professional certificate programs. The short online programs are designed to help you quickly develop groundbreaking skills in emerging areas in as little as 8 weeks.
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Facebook
facebook.com › p › MIT-Professional-Certificate-in-Coding-100064063329217
MIT Professional Certificate in Coding | Facebook
The MIT xPRO Professional Certificate in Coding is an immersive full-stack coding program which consists of four different open-source MERN components.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/learnprogramming › wanted: advice/ reviews on mit professional certificate for full stack development with mern
r/learnprogramming on Reddit: WANTED: Advice/ Reviews on MIT Professional Certificate for Full Stack Development with MERN
November 13, 2020 -

Hi, I found this MIT Professional Certificate for Full Stack Development with MERN program (link below), but I can't seem to find reviews for this specific program. I looked at the curriculum and it seems similar to other bootcamps out there. Has anyone here completed this program, if so, how was your experience with it? Are there any other programs or resources that any of you recommend? I have no experience other than online tutorials but I am looking to make a career change to front end development in the next year. (Currently run a math boot camp at a community college.) I am very committed and eager to learn. I would appreciate any advice and thank you all ahead of time.

Program link: MIT Professional Certificate for Fullstack Web Development with MERN

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MIT jumped the bandwagon of making $$ off of the bootcamp trend (CalTech does that with Simplilearn).
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Hi there, My name is Erin Rosenblatt and I’m from the team at Emeritus, the organization that runs this program in collaboration with MIT xPRO. I wanted to hop in here to add some more detail about the course, how it’s structured and why, and the types of support we provide. We are always eager to hear from our learners as that helps us to continuously improve. If you haven’t already, u/Square_Rabbit65 , I invite you to share this feedback and anything else about your experience with our Program Support team. This 32-week program is designed for beginners to go from little-to-no coding experience to being prepared for an entry-level full stack coding job. Learners are meant to devote 15-20 hours a week to completing assignments and it’s a flexible course so we don’t have any fixed times of the day or week in which this work must be done. Here’s a quick overview of the course content: Part 1 - Web Development with JavaScript: The first three weeks of the course are foundational weeks, designed for absolute beginners to set up their systems and to learn about foundational computer and programming concepts as they begin to learn JavaScript. Weeks, 4-7 revisit these foundational concepts in greater depth and give learners the opportunity for additional practice. In Weeks 8-10, learners focus on styling, asynchronous programming and recursion. They build sites with more complex animations, such as a map displaying live bus location data or an animation that follows a user’s mouse movements. Part 2 - Front-End Development: In Weeks 11 – 20, learners develop skills in React starting with simple projects in React standalone, working with hooks, state, and parent/child components. By Week 13, they create their first app with the create-react-app toolchain and by the end of Week 20 they’ve created a front-end application and deployed it to the cloud. Part 3 - Back-End Development: In Weeks 20-30, learners incorporate the server and data store to build a complete application. They use common libraries and tools to improve their projects and testing. They will also work with testing and DevOps. Learners wrap up the course with a portfolio of their projects to demonstrate their skills to employers. And here’s some information about how we expect learners to spend the 15-20 hours per week of course time: Faculty videos: The videos from MIT faculty are designed for learners to code along. While there is between 45-120 minutes of video content per week (later weeks get longer), we expect learners to follow along, pause, re-watch the videos as they code. If a learner is actively coding along with the videos, we anticipate they would take between 3-5 hours to watch and experiment with code. Coding activities and assignments: Between graded exercises and coding challenges posed in the videos, we expect learners to spend between 7-10 hours completing coding exercises each week. Additional activities:  We expect learners to spend up to 3 hours per week completing knowledge checks and contributing to discussions with their classmates. These activities are designed for learners to quickly test their understanding and to extend their knowledge and use what they’ve learned creatively. Additional resources: We provide a summary guide for each week along with curated supplementary resources. We encourage learners to explore these resources to both learn more about the topics covered and to get plugged into industry-standard resources and communities. As with most things, the more you put in, the more you get out. Projects & Capstone: Each of the 3 sections of the course has a final project to bring together the concepts and provide an opportunity for real-world application. These projects are graded by our Course Leaders and learners receive feedback on their work and how to improve. Part 1: Learners will develop a personal website to highlight the 3 coding projects they will completed in the course. We expect learners to work on this project over 5 weeks and to make continuous improvements over the duration of the course. Part 2: Learners build out the front end of a banking application with React. They’ll focus on synchronizing parent/child components to ensure the data captured locally is updated based on user input.  We expect learners to work on this project for 4 weeks. Part 3: For their final capstone project, learners have 2 choices. They may build out the back end of the front-end banking application they developed in Part 2 or they can work on a new project to build out a full stack restaurant ordering application from scratch. We expect learners to work on this for 5-6 weeks. Finally, I’ll include some of the support that we provide in the program: Learning Facilitators: Along with discussion boards where learners can post questions to receive responses from their learning facilitators and peers, this course offers multiple office hours each week. The office hours are live sessions with learning facilitators where learners can ask questions directly. Learners also have access to a support ticket system that allows them to send questions directly to the learning facilitators. Industry Mentors: Learners work with mentors who have years of industry experience and have built teams of developers at their companies. Mentors meet with learners in groups and 1:1 to explore possible career paths in the web development industry, and the steps to get there They also provide guidance and feedback on capstone projects at the end of this course. Career Coaches: Career coaches work with learners throughout the program in group and 1:1 sessions to cover topics such as: resumes, how to begin a job search, LinkedIn networking, interviewing, and salary negotiation. As has been mentioned elsewhere in this thread, this is a new course, just launched in December of 2020. So far, our learner feedback has been positive overall, but that doesn’t mean there aren’t areas that we could improve the curriculum and experience. We’ve rolled out a few improvements already and have more in the works. For anyone who has any questions about this program, you can DM me or email mit@emeritus.org .
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MIT xPRO
xpro.mit.edu › announcements
MIT xPRO | Announcements
“Learning to code opens up career opportunities in a technology-driven world, and at Emeritus, we are excited to collaborate with MIT xPRO in helping furthering this vision,” says Shaun Dubash, Senior Director at Emeritus.
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MIT xPRO
xpro.mit.edu › catalog
Catalog | MIT xPRO
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.
🌐
Emeritus
emeritus.org › home › program information sessions › information session on mit xpro professional certificate in coding: full stack development with mern
Information session on MIT xPRO Professional Certificate in Coding: Full Stack Development with MERN Information sessions | Emeritus Online Courses
However, the lack of technical expertise has become their greatest obstacle. To overcome this challenge, MIT xPRO has designed a 26-week Professional Certificate in Coding: Full Stack Development with MERN.
Published   December 2, 2024