I'm a data professional of 4+ years by the way of a biostatistics heavy masters-my work experience included first using STATA to do more inferential statistics stuff (GLMs, survival analysis) and then I learned R to do a bunch of stuff outside of even statistics and programming/automating. Though I have the years of experience, coding skills and took some short-courses on ML/data science here and there I never actually took a full-length DS/ML dedicated course and nor have I used ML at work so decided to enroll in this course to help me learn ML in a deeper sense (no pun intended hehe).
I took Jose Portilla's General Python programming course and thought it was excellent for me. I have tried learning Python previously through books (Learn Python the Hard Way) and websites like codecademy and data camp, but this course really helped me learn all the fundamentals. After taking the course and doing some practice problems, I feel comfortable enough to know how to program in Python.
I decided to then take his ML/DS bootcamp. As I went through the lectures, I found it much harder to follow/keep up with the course than the programming course. I will give him credit that in 25 hours he was trying to teach both fundamentals and syntax of Python's data science libraries so because he couldn't realistically do all that (and did refer to introduction to statistical learning as a companion source), the course weighed heavily on syntax. As a result, I ended up finding it hard to focus and started skimming through most of the lectures (and took me months to finish this course because I felt so disengaged at some point). I feel comfortable with pandas and the visualization libraries in Python (I'm already extremely comfortable with tidyverse and ggplot2 in R) through this course but when it came to the ML lectures, I still don't feel comfortable with unsupervised/deep learning and Spark.
I came to the conclusion I don't feel like lectures/videos are really the best method to learn this material. Does anybody have any suggestions as to what worked for you (especially those who have not done DS as a degree)? I have looked through the Introduction to Statistical Learning book years ago and started looking into it again now but sometimes that can get overwhelming as well.
Insight is appreciated. Thank you!
Anyone here took Jose Portilla's Udemy course? What's the overall review of his course?
I just finished Jose Portilla's Data Science and ML Python Bootcamp on Udemy. Am I ready to try and make…
Complete a Data Science and Machine Learning course,now what?!
Look here, now you have 2 remaining wishes :)
https://github.com/clone95/Machine-Learning-Study-Path-March-2019
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How are these 2 courses. Udemy courses are quite cheap in my country during the sale. As low as 5 to 10 dollars? Should I go for them?