Forum Moderators: phranque
The ones I'm seriously considering at the moment is sessions.edu, Baker College, and University of Pheonix Online.
Any insight would be appreciated, I'm swimming in info here and don't know where to go :b
I would think that taking a course/program locally would be a better option than doing something online, especially if you're looking for a job in your area.
Although, I qustion the real value of a "certificate" in the first place, unless a potential employer is looking for one.
regards,
Mark
My situation is I am already pretty well experienced in web design, self taught and have been doing it for quite some time. I just always feel like I'm missing something by not being formally trained. I was looking for an online course to help fine tune and polish my training by someone with more experience than I. But my main reason was to learn some new technology, so I'm leaning towards sessions.edu because they offer individual courses on specific items.
But I'm still not sure, I'm leaning in every direction at the moment :) But again, thank you for the good advice.
Seriously you should just:
Buy 50 books (seriously 50) on all the topics you want from Photoshop to Java to PHP to Xhtml.
Buy all the programs you need: dreamweaver, photoshop, illustrator, etc...
Buy a cheaper desktop or laptop ($700-1000 or so) to learn linux, and screw up things without worrying about your main machine.
Buy some mutli-domain web hosting, perhaps even a VPS.
You could get all this and pay about the same amount as ONE class from sessions.edu
Then just sit back and dedicate yourself to one subject at a time, read like crazy, study like crazy, code like crazy.
I needed someone who could do the job but was open to new ideas and would be able to learn. This person was graphically qualified, and html capable, but only thru that program did he know about server-side technologies (just knew about them, not how to do them) and most importantly that there were many ways to skin a beast.
Worked out well... over time we both learned just how poor the certificate program was technically, yet at the same time the "broadness" was a key success factor for retraining.
Now whether open minded people attend webmaster certificate programs, or certificate programs open minds.... I am not qualified to answer that ;-)