General Assembly is a technical education provider that teaches students the skills, career advice and networking opportunities needed to make a career change into a tech role, in as little as three months. General Assembly offers part-time and full-time bootcamps and short courses in web and mobile development, product management, data science, and more. The bootcamp experience is led by instructors who are expert practitioners in their field. Students should expect to build a solid portfolio of real-life projects. Since 2011, General Assembly has graduated more than 40,000 students worldwide from the full time and part time bootcamp.
To enroll at General Assembly, applicants should submit an online application to connect with a GA Admissions team member who will work with them to decide if a tech bootcamps is the right fit. The GA Admissions staff are also prepared to speak with applicants about the best tech role for them, learning styles at GA, expected outcomes after the bootcamp, options to finance the bootcamp, career services offered by GA, and more.
To help students land their first job in a tech role, General Assembly students are supported by career coaches from day one. The program is enhanced by a career services team that is constantly in talks with employers about their tech hiring needs.
Although I graduated with a marketing degree in May, I felt that my formal education leaned more on theory than practice. I came to General Assembly to get the most up-to-date digital marketing tactics. This course re-ignited my love of learning, most of which I had lost in the rigor of my university program. The instructors were top notch; they explained difficult concepts clearly and got me excited to put what I learned into practice. My entire GA experi...
Although I graduated with a marketing degree in May, I felt that my formal education leaned more on theory than practice. I came to General Assembly to get the most up-to-date digital marketing tactics. This course re-ignited my love of learning, most of which I had lost in the rigor of my university program. The instructors were top notch; they explained difficult concepts clearly and got me excited to put what I learned into practice. My entire GA experience, from onboarding, to the class sessions, to the alumni benefits package, to staying in the loop with the community has changed how I view education. I now consider myself a life-long learner and have General Assembly to thank for that. I had such a positive student experience that I continue to stay involved with the GA community, by attending a few events and workshops each month. I have nothing but great things to say about GA!
The couse was well structured, the lectures were packed with up-to-date industry knowledge. And almost more importantly, the projects provided immediate application and a rip-the-band-aid type experience to get our cohort into the UX mindset.
As the course went on, there were less chances for feedback, so I personally saught it as much as possible.
If you want to pivot and make that big change in your life, it's going to be a lot about you having the right mindset to do...
The couse was well structured, the lectures were packed with up-to-date industry knowledge. And almost more importantly, the projects provided immediate application and a rip-the-band-aid type experience to get our cohort into the UX mindset.
As the course went on, there were less chances for feedback, so I personally saught it as much as possible.
If you want to pivot and make that big change in your life, it's going to be a lot about you having the right mindset to do so. In Tyler Hartrich's class, he emphasizes having this mindset over and over which I now realize was absolutely crucial to me getting everything I could out of the class to make this transition.
This transformative experience can be daunting and very challenging, and I don't think it would have been possible without General Assembly's UXDI program and Tyler Hartrich's teaching method.
I took this course to update my HTML skills and learn CSS. Before selecting General Assembly, I checked out online reviews, took their free course and checked out two other online schools. I thought General Assembly would give me the skills I was looking for so I could create engaging webpages.
I was wrong about General Assembly. After completing the 10-week course, I was still confused about CSS and I did not have the skills to make my website match my design. Here's what disapp...
I took this course to update my HTML skills and learn CSS. Before selecting General Assembly, I checked out online reviews, took their free course and checked out two other online schools. I thought General Assembly would give me the skills I was looking for so I could create engaging webpages.
I was wrong about General Assembly. After completing the 10-week course, I was still confused about CSS and I did not have the skills to make my website match my design. Here's what disappointed me:
My original plan was to take the JavaScript class from General Assembly, but for the above reasons, I instead searched for another school to learn that skill. I chose Skillcrush and for the same cost of one 10-week General Assembly JavaScript class, I got unlimited access to all their front and back end web developer courses along with a complete suite of web designer courses and wordpress coding courses. After four months at Skillcrush, I am now confident in my HTML, CSS, web design and JavaScript abilites and am actually creating engaging pages that match my designs.
I recommend you avoid General Assembly and check out Skillcrush instead. I wish I had gone to Skillcrush first.
I was a student in General Assembly's 12-week Web Development Immersive program in San Francisco in the fall of 2017. Altogether, I learned SO MUCH throughout the program and now feel like I can be a lifelong independent development learner. The program is fast paced, very dynamic, and well suited for motivated learners.
You really get out of the program what you put into it and to succeed you need to take ownership of your learning. There is a lot of assistance available (office...
I was a student in General Assembly's 12-week Web Development Immersive program in San Francisco in the fall of 2017. Altogether, I learned SO MUCH throughout the program and now feel like I can be a lifelong independent development learner. The program is fast paced, very dynamic, and well suited for motivated learners.
You really get out of the program what you put into it and to succeed you need to take ownership of your learning. There is a lot of assistance available (office hours, TAs, classmates, etc.), but you need to be proactive in seeking out additional support when you need it.
The curriculum is updated regularly based on feedback from graduates and employers, which is great to see, but that means not everything is completely ironed out before teaching.
I was very impressed with the instructors (especially Justin!). The teachers really matter in a course that is actively taught 40 hours a week and General Assembly seems to do a great job selecting and supporting the staff.
This rigorous program was the best decision I've ever made, hands down. I've learned so much in such a short amount of time, which would have never been possible just learning everything by myself. It's a commitment and you must devote every aspect of your life to, learning how to program and not just that, but how does everything work and why it works. Being at General Assembly I not only gained valuable skills like learning how to build an express backend, building full stack...
This rigorous program was the best decision I've ever made, hands down. I've learned so much in such a short amount of time, which would have never been possible just learning everything by myself. It's a commitment and you must devote every aspect of your life to, learning how to program and not just that, but how does everything work and why it works. Being at General Assembly I not only gained valuable skills like learning how to build an express backend, building full stack ruby applications, even the ins-and-outs of git just to name a few, but I gained an incredible community of like-minded individuals who I'm happy to call my friends as well. The toughest experience of my life, but I would not hesitate to do this all over again.
One thing I would recommend is that you sharpen your JS skills to a very refined point. This program moves FAST! So, make friends that will help you along the way of this tough as nails journey. One thing I do have to say that probably isn't too positive is that some of the instructors simply didn't really care, you'll have to weed those out and yea it will be apparent. I had two in my cohort, one didn't really care and the other was already on level 900000 when trying to explain certain things, basically wasn't too beginner friendly. The curriculum needs a little bit of work too, but don't be afraid to speak up and let the instructors know what is needed in aiding you with the learning process. For example, I fought for screencasts of certain lectures as well as others from my cohort and oh boy! did that help.
Oh and yea, I hardly had any programming experience beforehand, maybe only a few months of HTML, CSS, and JS...yup, the basics(all from free code camp). Also, no CS degree!! Currently, just graduated.
A 5 week online course
I went into the course with 2 eyes open and yet, the course manages to surprise me with the flexibility of the UX Design Process. Love the applicability of the design process and hopefully, I can make use of the process in what I do now (I am a curriculum designer). Doing it part-time with a full-time job was a killer though :)
A really good course and great tutor
I recently completed the Web Development Immersive course at General Assembly in Boston. It was an amazing experience and I recommend it highly. It's a grueling course - 12 weeks, M-F, 9-5 with 1-2 hours of homework per night. Puctuality and attendance are critical, in order to graduate you can only have 5 tardies and only 3 missed days. I don't recommend missing any days if it can be helped because you'll miss so much in one day. During the course you complete four full-stack web applicat...
I recently completed the Web Development Immersive course at General Assembly in Boston. It was an amazing experience and I recommend it highly. It's a grueling course - 12 weeks, M-F, 9-5 with 1-2 hours of homework per night. Puctuality and attendance are critical, in order to graduate you can only have 5 tardies and only 3 missed days. I don't recommend missing any days if it can be helped because you'll miss so much in one day. During the course you complete four full-stack web applications, 3 individual and one group project. The curricilum is excellent. They ensure that you learn the basics of how JavaScript works (e.g. closures, async, prototypical inheritance, truthy/falsey, hoisting, promises, etc.). Their style of instruction really helps to cement the concepts in your brain. For each topic there is typically a lecture, demo (they show you how to code it), code-along (they code along with you), and lab (you code it yourself or in a small group). The instructors are engaging and helpful (without doing the work for you). They definitely teach you to stand on your own. My only constructive feedback is that I wish they taught a more popular web framework than Ember. I get why Ember: it "goes with" Ruby, it's opinionated, and easy to teach, and I realize that they can't teach everything. But I would have liked to have learned React or Angular which are more popular than Ember.
The makeup of the class participants is really diverse. Lots of women, non-white, and all around not totally straight, white 20-something males. Also people from all sorts of backgrounds from teaching to real estate, to just about anything.
The career support is terrific. You meet with them once a week as a group where they help you with your personal brand, LinkedIn, resume, networking, portfolio, and more. They give you personal feedback, and are available for 1x1s weekly as well. They continue their support post-graduation as well.
The instructional space is really nice. The office is conveniently located steps from South Station. It's a brand new space, with large classrooms, individual meeting rooms, "phone booths", a large lobby and students lounge with coffee, water, refrigerator, etc. The front-lines support staff is super-helpful and supply laptop chargers, phone chargers, etc. They also keep the space in tip-top condition.
I can't say enough good things about it, and would recommend it to anyone interested in a coding bootcamp.
Very good course!
Sydney
I attended a 6 day Product Management Course in London and was hugely impressed by the quality of the instruction, resources and activities. Our class of 20 students came from a hugely diverse background, aged 25 to 55, 7 different nationalities, 50/50 male and female. This meant that I got to work with so many different people who brought ideas to the class that I had never considered. Quality instruction was blended with individual and group work in class and supported by homework activi...
I attended a 6 day Product Management Course in London and was hugely impressed by the quality of the instruction, resources and activities. Our class of 20 students came from a hugely diverse background, aged 25 to 55, 7 different nationalities, 50/50 male and female. This meant that I got to work with so many different people who brought ideas to the class that I had never considered. Quality instruction was blended with individual and group work in class and supported by homework activities. I worked on a personal project during the week that mirrored the course content, culminating in a presentation of my project on the final (6thth) day. A tiring, but highly informative course. I began implanting the ideas at work on the very next day.
We were taught more than one tech stack. Our teachers are leaders in their field and are masters at what they teach.
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For a limited time, take $1,500 off a General Assembly bootcamp or short-course with code CR1500GA
Eligible for students in the US, Canada and United Kingdom, excluding students in New York State. To claim the discount, enroll before January 31, 2025 and choose a start date before March 31, 2025.
Course Report readers can receive an Exclusive Scholarship to General Assembly!
How much does General Assembly cost?
General Assembly costs around $16,450. On the lower end, some General Assembly courses like Visual Design (Short Course) cost $3,500.
What courses does General Assembly teach?
General Assembly offers courses like 1. Data Science Bootcamp (Full Time), 2. Software Engineering Bootcamp (Full Time), 2. Software Engineering Bootcamp (Part Time), 3. User Experience Design Bootcamp (Full Time) and 13 more.
Where does General Assembly have campuses?
General Assembly has in-person campuses in London, New York City, Paris, Singapore, and Sydney. General Assembly also has a remote classroom so students can learn online.
Is General Assembly worth it?
The data says yes! General Assembly reports a 84% graduation rate, and 95% of General Assembly alumni are employed. The data says yes! In 2021, General Assembly reported a 82% graduation rate, a median salary of , and N/A of General Assembly alumni are employed.
Is General Assembly legit?
We let alumni answer that question. 705 General Assembly alumni, students, and applicants have reviewed General Assembly and rate their overall experience a 4.31 out of 5.
Does General Assembly offer scholarships or accept the GI Bill?
Yes, For a limited time, take $1,500 off a General Assembly bootcamp or short-course with code CR1500GA Eligible for students in the US, Canada and United Kingdom, excluding students in New York State. To claim the discount, enroll before January 31, 2025 and choose a start date before March 31, 2025. General Assembly accepts the GI Bill!
Can I read General Assembly reviews?
You can read 705 reviews of General Assembly on Course Report! General Assembly alumni, students, and applicants have reviewed General Assembly and rate their overall experience a 4.31 out of 5.
Is General Assembly accredited?
All of General Assembly's regulatory information can be found here: https://generalassemb.ly/regulatory-information
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