Twitter Thread: Experience at Lambda School for UX

(twitter.com)

145 points | by mobileexpert 1528 days ago

12 comments

  • austenallred 1528 days ago
    This story probably represents the single greatest failure of Lambda School ever. There are times when the whole story isn’t being told, but this isn’t one of them, Nicole is right. I’ve spent a lot of time talking with Nicole and her cohort, have cancelled her ISA, and we are working on a full retrospective for her cohort (UX6).

    It started with misaligned expectations. We worked with a lot of hiring partners to create a UX curriculum that would be easiest to jump into a first UX career from, and it was clear in doing that research that a research-first perspective with less emphasis on design is what would get students hired faster in a field that can be notoriously difficult to break into (relative to software engineering). We hired experts in that aspect of UX design, which can be terribly broad.

    Partway through the data started to show that half of the class was pretty happy and about half was not. Usually it’s not split like that - there’s always an outlier student or two but not half totally happy and half frustrated, so we started to dig in.

    Two things happened:

    1. We realized half of the students were expecting a design-heavy experience, and we hadn’t communicated well enough what to expect. There were pieces on design, but you wouldn’t come out of this curriculum as a UI designer, and students were expecting that.

    2. We decided to try and help those students who wanted the UI emphasis, hired more folks, and started creating curriculum in a pretty rushed manner to help them reach their goals. In retrospect that was a huge mistake; there simply wasn’t enough time to build a full design-heavy curriculum in flight, and the students who wanted design-heavy curriculum were very disappointed.

    That cohort was (rightly) frustrated because we tried to do too much too late. I recognized that was a risk going into those curriculum changes, but took on the risk because the most important thing is making students successful and happy. In retrospect it was the wrong call.

    I wish like hell that I could go back and make everything perfect for that cohort of students; there are about 20 of them and I’ve spent time one on one with every one. We brought in more people to work with them one on one and that curriculum is much better now, but understandably 5 or 6 students in that cohort had lost their faith in our ability to deliver and opted to leave the program. Of course, we cancelled their ISAs; we lost a ton of money training these students and they don’t owe us anything, but that’s the right thing to do. We promise an awesome experience and in this instance didn’t deliver. We tried to do too much in too short a timeframe and missed the mark.

    • sandofsky 1528 days ago
      > Of course, we cancelled their ISAs; we lost a ton of money training these students and they don’t owe us anything, but that’s the right thing to do.

      This was not a magnanimous gesture. You fought with the students for months, when it was clear things weren't working. It wasn't until the story blew up in the media that you agreed to cancel the ISAs.

      And then to be released from their ISAs, you demanded students sign a contract agreeing not to sue Lambda School.

      https://twitter.com/tylernishida/status/1230969940733095937

      • sokoloff 1528 days ago
        I don't have any connection to either side, but I have to say that it seems reasonably fair to me to tie the release of the ISA to a covenant not to sue. (It's like if a car maker buys back my lemon car, I don't expect that I also get to sue them because my car was a lemon.)
        • prostheticvamp 1528 days ago
          If you traded in your old car, and paid for a lemon, their buying back the lemon is fine - but you probably want your old car, too.

          The ISA is only one part of what they “paid” to attend. The other thing is months of opportunity cost, loans, etc. An ISA release does not make one whole with regard to those other losses.

        • nicesnowoman 1528 days ago
          It's absolutely shady. Lambda doesn't want students/customers to sue because they know they have committed fraud, and would lose in the courts.

          Austen's lying again. Students fought hard to get the ISAs cancelled. They should have been working towards learning and job searching instead, not fighting a pathological liar and terrible organization.

        • thesausageking 1528 days ago
          The students had a reasonable fraud claim here which would've given them treble damages if they won.

          My guess is after pressuring students to go away, Lambda School (or its lawyers) realized this and agreed to settle rather than fight it in court and risk having to pay 3x as much in addition to their legal costs.

        • sandofsky 1528 days ago
          One issue is presenting this as "the right thing to do." At minimum, there's a quid pro quo.
    • hysan 1528 days ago
      > we lost a ton of money training these students and they don’t owe us anything, but that’s the right thing to do.

      I’ve heard similar statements many times from bootcamps and it’s never sat well with me. It’s one of the major contributing factors that drove me away from working at a bootcamp.

      While nothing is wrong about stating this, I’ve always thought student first. When a bootcamp fails its student(s) in this manner, money is lost. That is nothing relative to what the student loses - time, money, effort, and relationships. If there’s one common thread I’ve seen from the students I’ve taught, it’s that they all sacrifice a lot to try and change their lives.

      What hurts the most when the system fails these students is that sometimes, they can’t just go back to what they were doing before. That’s why messaging around expectations [from both sides] needs to be crystal clear. This attention to detail is paramount in a bootcamp, but it often meets opposition with the business model and/or the “move fast and break things” mindset of a startup delivering a product [curriculum].

      That I’m still reading stuff like this so many years after bootcamps have become established makes me lose faith that things will really change for the better.

    • kingbirdy 1528 days ago
      Hi Austen, thanks for replying to this. But could you explain how attempting to change curriculum mid-flight would lead to:

      * being graded by a student 2 months ahead

      * being taught by someone hiding under a sheet

      * being paired with a student who hadn't been participating in the curriculum

      It seems like there was more going wrong for this student than just a curriculum change.

      • austenallred 1528 days ago
        * being graded by a student 2 months ahead

        There’s also an instructor in every cohort, so your TA (we call them TLs) is more of a first line of defense. We brought in the strongest design students to be TAs which is why they weren’t very much further in the curriculum - in fact they actually had a different curriculum. An exception to the rule caused by curriculum change.

        *being taught by someone under a sheet

        We brought in contractors to help teach the new curriculum, and one hadn’t adjusted the light in his room for video conferencing and couldn’t see the screen for sunlight, so... improvised. Normally there are weeks of practice lessons and training, so this also the result of a rush.

        • jfarmer 1528 days ago
          Is there no onboarding for contract instructors that guide them through setting up their environment for effective online teaching? Someone who has taught remotely would be very aware of how hard it is to get sound and light right. They'd have a pre-flight checklist and spend 10-15 minutes beforehand ensuring everything looked and sounded ok.

          Someone who hasn't needs to be trained because it's not like a physical classroom at all.

          And of course, teachers need to improvise every day, but if they're not used to doing it then they need coaching on that, too.

          For example, whenever I teach remotely, I mail a good pair of wired, directional-mic headphones to every student. I also send them PDFs outlining how to position the light in their room.

          I do that because they are unfamiliar with the subtleties of remote interaction and it's going to ruin everyone's experience if students have barriers to participation and feedback.

          • austenallred 1528 days ago
            There usually is if we’re not scrambling to do too much too late. Again, was a huge miss.
        • gerardwil 1528 days ago
          > We brought in contractors to help teach the new curriculum, and one hadn’t adjusted the light in his room for video conferencing and couldn’t see the screen for sunlight, so... improvised. Normally there are weeks of practice lessons and training, so this also the result of a rush.

          Huh? The guy under the sheet was Christijan Draper, the UX program manager who's been with Lambda School since May 2018. Why are you lying?

          • austenallred 1528 days ago
            Wait, what? That's not what I heard. I'll ask the team and look it up, but I was almost sure it was a contract instructor.
    • jfarmer 1528 days ago
      If the plan was to launch a research-centric UX course and to have them collaborate with the web cohort at the end, who was going to be responsible for actually implementing the research that the UX students undertook once they began collaborating?

      Anyone who has worked in the industry knows that most software projects fail for human reasons, not technical ones.

      Like, who was going to be opening up Photoshop or In Design or Figma or whatever? Who was going to be slicing designs into HTML/CSS? Who was going to be implementing interactive prototypes and putting them in front of users? Who was responsible for ensuring that communication between the UX side and the technical side was happening effectively?

      Who were the product and project managers (in title or de facto) and were they clear that this was their job?

      In your interview with Vincent Woo, you said that "reviews were fine" for the UX cohort and then they suddenly fell off the cliff once labs began. This story more or less explains why: the students were strung along (intentionally or not) with the promise that it was labs that matters.

      Once in labs, they find out: https://twitter.com/watsonwaswrite/status/123090468067232154...

      If that was the promise, why wouldn't LS move heaven and Earth to make sure that labs was a home run? Why wouldn't LS ensure every student in the group project was crystal clear on expectations? Why wouldn't LS do a dry run version of the capstone project across cohorts to control for unanticipated group dynamics? Ensure that everyone in the web and UX cohorts has worked with at least 5-10 different people cross-functionally before capstone time?

      And fine, maybe you "call an audible" — lord knows we had to do that at DBC. But why then wouldn't you then bring in 5-10 experienced project managers to facilitate things, communicate everything to everyone, and explain that this is what needs to happen to make the capstone a success for everyone?

      Shouldn't asking and answering these questions before admitting a single student be table stakes?

      The whole project seems half-baked from start to finish and this outcome 100% predictable.

      • nicesnowoman 1528 days ago
        I'm a student - "reviews are fine" because students are also scared of being truthful to staff. The staff do not have a good history of listening to negative feedback and criticism. They are either ignorant or delusional.

        Look at Dustin Myers and how he responds to criticism: https://twitter.com/dustint314/status/1156423191645917184

        Look at Trevor McKendrick (Chief of Staff) and how he responds to criticism: https://twitter.com/TrevMcKendrick/status/108285421890879488...

        Look at all of Austen's interactions on Twitter to students and how he gaslights them: https://twitter.com/Austen/status/1213711252175740928

        Look at Ben Nelson (cofounder) and see how he only interacts with positive testimonials and discount negative ones: https://twitter.com/sunjieming/likes

        Look at Ryan Holdaway and see how he only interacts with positive testimonials and discounts negative ones: https://twitter.com/Ryan_Holdaway/likes

        Look at Ryan Hamblin - same thing: https://twitter.com/RyanleeHamblin/likes

        There's a clear pattern here. These are key people in staff who should be listening and responding with empathy to the horrifying student stories throughout Lambda. All negative dissent is squashed by dividing and siloing students. They are made to think their issues with the "school" are due to some personal deficiency.

        It is no wonder that negative student accounts rarely get amplified or even created. I was personally scared to write negative reviews for fear of being admonished by their "Student Success" team. There's been rumors circling of students removed from Slack after they complained about the quality of education. Leadership and key members of staff are all complicit.

        • SamReidHughes 1528 days ago
          Your links completely fail to cast any of their targets in a negative light.
          • wpietri 1528 days ago
            If you can't see something, that doesn't mean it isn't there. It just means you don't see it.

            What I see is definitely not behavior I'd want in instructors.

          • thatdrew 1526 days ago
            wrong.
    • ec109685 1528 days ago
      Lost a ton of money? Lambda is profitable if 1/4 get a job [1], so 6 * 30k * 1/4 is $45k.

      [1] https://nymag.com/intelligencer/amp/2020/02/lambda-schools-j...

      • austenallred 1528 days ago
        That’s not true. I have no idea where they got that but we’d absolutely lose money if only 1 in 4 got jobs. A lot of it.
        • ec109685 1527 days ago
          They say “internal documents”.
    • nicesnowoman 1528 days ago
      Dude stop lying. Also, other UX students with similar shitty experiences as that cohort have been trying to get their ISAs cancelled, and are getting the runaround. Come on.

      Did you not read the scathing letter? If you want to address these issues - why don't you publicly post the letter and address every single damning issue highlighted if you are so confident? There were things outlined outside of just "bad instruction" and "misaligned expectations". Do better.

    • danso 1528 days ago
      Given that Lambda has stumbled on branching out to UI/UX, has that given cause for you to slow down plans to expand into nursing and cybersecurity [0]? Don't get me wrong, I think succeeding in teaching code is an achievement in itself. But seems like curriculums for nursing and cybersecurity are much more orthogonal/outside-your-wheelhouse than front-end dev/design.

      [0] https://www.edsurge.com/news/2019-01-08-online-coding-school...

      • austenallred 1528 days ago
        We currently aren’t working on cybersecurity or nursing. We have about half of a cybersecurity curriculum built but that’s paused, and nursing is always the thing I’m excited to do next but we haven’t done anything there.
    • nicesnowoman 1528 days ago
      "there are about 20 of them and I’ve spent time one on one with every one"

      ^^ No, you haven't. Really, dude? Really?

      At this point: lol

      • zaroth 1528 days ago
        Honestly, as someone totally on the outside who is somewhat curious about LS and what they might be doing right or wrong, I think your pervasive and demeaning/mocking responses do a better job of negating your points than substantiating them.

        I can see you’re obviously beyond frustrated and angry. I think it’s helpful to a point to “air dirty laundry” but when it appears to be someone out for retribution it really ceases to become appropriate for HN.

        • chestercat 1527 days ago
          As someone who has been observing the Lambda School news on Twitter for the better part of a year, I just want to state that this student has every right to be angry and frustrated. It might not be appropriate in tone to someone on the outside, but for anyone who has been watching closely, it's clear that Lambda is acted unfettered and knowingly exploiting students.

          Not only that, but they are apparently pushing students to join their coding programs prior to completion of prework/entrance tests: https://twitter.com/CHERdotdev/status/1231661150619652096

          For-profit education like bootcamps deserve to be scrutinized and regulated. There are real consequences to poor educational outcomes.

  • pembrook 1528 days ago
    To be honest, part of the problem is the field of UX design itself. Unlike “coding” (which is standardized and easier to quantify, ie. Does the program update the database or not?) user experience is a vague, lumpy, subjective mess of buzzwords with no linear pathway to proficiency.

    We all know UX is extremely important to the success of any startup, but quantifying it is a different story. Designers can’t even agree on their own responsibilities and what to call themselves, with job titles and responsibilities I’ve seen at many companies having 0 correlation to the next.

    Any great UX/product/service/interaction/blah blah designer I’ve worked with is a former graphic designer with great taste, who over the years learned how to build usable software by working on tons of software products and spending tons of time with users.

    It’s not exactly something that lends itself to the bootcamp model. It makes much more sense in an apprentice model.

    If it makes her feel any better, I’m certain 90% of schools teaching multi-year “UX” design programs would not have done a better job. At least she doesn’t have to go into debt this way.

    • jdhn 1528 days ago
      >Designers can’t even agree on their own responsibilities and what to call themselves, with job titles and responsibilities I’ve seen at many companies having 0 correlation to the next.

      I agree 100%. I've been in the UX field for about 6 years, and if there's one thing I've noticed, it's intense fragmentation when it comes to that actual job title. What's the difference between them? I couldn't tell you as at each job my responsibilities were basically the same.

      Also, one of the biggest issues that I have with UX bootcamps is that there's a lot of emphasis placed on making the portfolio look visually appealing, but when you get into it there's not always a lot of substance. Same goes for a lot of work on Dribbble that's tagged as "UX" or "UX/UI".

      • austenallred 1528 days ago
        This is actually the crux of the problem here. We focused the curriculum on UX research-y fundamentals, and the students who wanted to come out as UI designers were disappointed.

        We tried to build in design-heavy curriculum partway through when we realized how misaligned those expectations were, but couldn’t do an effective job in such a short time frame, so those students just got more frustrated.

        It’s totally fair, we should have done a better job communicating and shouldn’t have tried to call an audible at the last minute to fix everything.

        • claudeganon 1528 days ago
          Why are you telling your students that they shouldn’t discuss problems with the school outside of channels monitored by Lambda?

          https://twitter.com/Austen/status/1213711252175740928

          You say that no “professional environment” would encourage this, but it’s actually a legally protected right in every workplace:

          https://www.dol.gov/olms/regs/compliance/EO_Posters/Employee...

          • nicesnowoman 1528 days ago
            They pull this BS all the time to students - it's terrible: https://twitter.com/nwilliams030/status/1219687148972056578

            I cannot believe how often Austen flat out lies on things so easily disproven.

            • austenallred 1528 days ago
              That addition to the student guide was to clarify that students can’t harass other students and have it be Ok even off of Lambda School’s platform. Has nothing whatsoever to do with stopping students from complaining.
              • detaro 1528 days ago
                Somehow it neglects to mention that, but instead uses a vague term of "Impacts the mission", which very much sounds like corporation-speak for "negative public attention" and similar things.

                Luckily, that's easy to fix by adding a sentence or two to this section.

                • austenallred 1528 days ago
                  Which I believe we did. I’d have to look back and see but students asked for that clarification and it’s either done or someone is working on that.
          • austenallred 1528 days ago
            What I said is we’re not going to create a Slack channel specifically for everyone to vent. There are a huge number of ways students can send feedback or complain.
            • claudeganon 1528 days ago
              That’s not what you said.

              Student:

              “I wish there was a safe place for upset students to chat to each other outside of Lambda’s slack. A worry-free environment, unmonitored by Austen & whoever has viewing permissions on our messages. Fear and uncertainty would be eliminated, and the real issues would be uncovered”

              You:

              “ That would not only be unwise for everyone involved but an enormous legal liability for the school. No professional environment you’ll ever be in will encourage something like that.

              There are a huge number of ways to submit feedback or complaints and we read all of them.”

              Which again, discussing your workplace conditions is protected, by law, under the NLRA. Why are you telling your students that “no professional environment you’ll ever be in will encourage something like that,” counter to what’s guaranteed them by US labor law?

              • beaner 1528 days ago
                > Why are you telling your students that “no professional environment you’ll ever be in will encourage something like that,” counter to what’s guaranteed them by US labor law?

                Encouragement and acceptance are two completely different things.

              • austenallred 1528 days ago
                Oh you’re right I actually read his original tweet wrong. They do have a space outside of Lambda School but it’s not sanctioned by Lambda School.
        • andrei_says_ 1528 days ago
          Would you address the classes being taught by students instead of experienced professionals.

          Also, did you release the cohort from their contractual obligations after failing them?

          • austenallred 1528 days ago
            Every cohort has an instructor who is a professional (usually multiple); we have 85 full-time teaching staff.

            We also put every student in a group of 8 students with one TA, where a TA is a student a few months ahead of them (on payroll). But that is only in addition to the full-time instructors.

  • heymijo 1528 days ago
    I can't read this account and say anything other than Lambda School is an ineffective educational program.

    You can set aside the issue of ISAs or anything about this woman.

    This poor of a product from Lambda is indefensible. A consumer or enterprise software startup can get away beginning with an ineffective MVP and iterating. A school offering an educational opportunity has a much higher floor to responsibly operate. This person shows that Lambda is operating well below that floor.

    Even if the students will never activate the repayment clauses of their ISAs Lambda has failed them. Silicon Valley seems to think that what it can't measure doesn't matter. But Lambda School, by pitching itself as a way for anyone to be a part of the tech boom gets up a person's hopes and then completely and utterly fails to deliver on its promise. That is on top of the opportunity cost of attending a school that fails to deliver anything close to the education advertised.

    • nicesnowoman 1528 days ago
      This, 100%. I'm a student and, while ISAs make Lambda interesting, am mostly disappointed due to the terrible educational quality (and staff's refusal to admit that the quality is pretty low across the board).

      Still, though, I've noticed the ISAs create some nuanced perverse things happening that are specific to Lambda - students attracted to the value prop are often much lower income (Lambda cited $22K average starting salary amongst their students) than the average bootcamp student. If Lambda fails them, these students may leave in worse financial prospects than they started with no safety net.

      The ISA also kicks in at 40% when you're only 4 weeks into a 40 week curriculum. After that point, it's very hard to leave due to sunk cost fallacy, and you are roped along wasting time, hoping for them to get their stuff together. I wish I and others left well before.

      • the_watcher 1528 days ago
        The last part seems like it could easily be improved by simply tying it to the portion of the curriculum covered.
        • nicesnowoman 1528 days ago
          I doubt they'd do that because it'd be bad for Lambda's financials.
        • austenallred 1528 days ago
          That is exactly how it happens. It’s 10% per week for the first 10 weeks, except you don’t owe anything at all until week 4. So it’s fully locked in at 10 weeks but is gradual until then.
          • wpietri 1528 days ago
            That is definitely not proportional. For 40 weeks, proportional would not be 10% per week, but 2.5% per week.
            • austenallred 1527 days ago
              0 0 0 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
              • wpietri 1527 days ago
                I think the assumption I can't do math is insulting. But let's run with it. Here, in the same form, is your theory of value delivery.

                  2.5 5.0 7.5 10.0 12.5 15.0 17.5 20.0 22.5 25.0 27.5 30.0 32.5 35.0 37.5 40.0 42.5 45.0 47.5 50.0 52.5 55.0 57.5 60.0 62.5 65.0 67.5 70.0 72.5 75.0 77.5 80.0 82.5 85.0 87.5 90.0 92.5 95.0 97.5 100.0
                
                That's your theory, of course. You can see how cost is not proportional to value delivery. But from what people have been saying about your program, it sounds like actual value delivery is more like

                  0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0 3.5 4.0 4.5 5.0 5.5 6.0 6.5 7.0 7.5 8.0 8.5 9.0 9.5 10.0 10.5 11.0 11.5 12.0 12.5 13.0 13.5 14.0 14.5 15.0 15.5 16.0 16.5 17.0 17.5 18.0 18.5 19.0 19.5 20.0
                
                So in that case, charging 100% when they're only 25% of the way through a program that's delivering 20% of what it should is even more obviously bad.
              • the_watcher 1527 days ago
                The pushback here is that this isn't proportional to the duration of the program. While you're right that this is proportional for 10 weeks, it's not proportional to program duration. If your position is that it's fair to charge 100% tuition for a 40 week program after 10 weeks, make that argument. Don't try to argue that 10% per week for 10 weeks is somehow proportional to 40 weeks.

                I'm a big fan of Lambda and am a pretty vocal defender, but this is simply misleading.

                • austenallred 1527 days ago
                  We're clearly talking past each other.

                  Yes, I think it's fair to owe full tuition once you're past 10 weeks in Lambda School, especially given a generous 4-week dropout period during which you owe nothing.

                  • the_watcher 1526 days ago
                    I think that's a perfectly reasonable position to take and is more generous than the alternative (as someone who dropped out of a degree program, I can attest that I wasn't able to return any of my student loans 6 weeks into the semester. I checked).

                    I wasn't trying to talk past you. My original comment was that a specific complaint about the amount owed being 40% after 4 weeks, despite 4 weeks not representing 40% of the program, could be addressed by tying payment directly to portion of curriculum covered. You responded that this is how it works, but you redefined the denominator in the proportion from the original complaint.

                    I don't think you're doing this in bad faith, I'm legitimately just trying to point out a response something that is clearly a frustration isn't translating how you intended.

                    • codingdave 1526 days ago
                      The other point being glossed over here is that higher education tuition is typically applied per term, not for an entire program. You don't get billed for four years tuition when you leave after one year - you have drop-out windows every term, and only pay for terms in which you attended.

                      So if LS has organized their cirriculum into "sprints", and wants to follow the standard in higher education, there would be a brief dropout window at the start of each sprint, with no ISA applied for sprints that were never started.

                      • wpietri 1526 days ago
                        Exactly. If you quit a CS program 50% of the way through, you only pay 50% of the cost. And just as important, you get credit for that 50%, and can go somewhere else. At Lambda School, quitting at 50% because of a bad education means you pay 100% of the cost and get 0 in credits.
                  • nicesnowoman 1526 days ago
                    It isn't generous at all. The material only seemed to get worse and worse to the point where it's basically unbearable by the time you hit Labs at the 4-5 month mark. Those with good experiences are lucky. Many others are stuck in the worst group settings possible.

                    You rope students in who have already quit their jobs for this opportunity. Most are going to want to hope for the best and stick it out, even if things seem fishy in the first 4 weeks.

                    Not only that, but Lambda often changes everything up after enrollment so the marketing materials/curriculum on the website are NOT the guarantee of what is delivered. You package this chaos up as "we are constantly improving" but the early cohorts who dry-run your experimental changes suffer greatly when curriculum is so underdeveloped to the point where we have to find so much supplementary material.

      • heymijo 1528 days ago
        I’m really sorry to hear you feel stuck. I hope you come out the other end of this with good prospects in spite of the inadequate training Lambda is providing.

        Thanks for adding your insight and experience to this thread.

    • SamReidHughes 1528 days ago
      You realize that there are colleges offering degrees in philosophy, right? And they don't even give you a refund when you find out the 4 years of education was useless.
      • heymijo 1528 days ago
        Hi Sam,

        HN asks that as discussions intensify, we get more thoughtful and substantive.

        I'll do my best to follow that norm as well as to converse with you, with Paul Graham's "How to Disagree" in mind [0].

        I'm not quite sure how your response fits into Paul's disagreement hierarchy with my original post in mind, but it doesn't seem to get at the meat of what I said.

        I do realize universities offer philosophy degrees. They certainly aren't STEM degrees that have set career paths outside of academia, however I would say that "useless" is too strong a descriptor.

        For one, I bet we could both look and find a number of successful people in the startup world that HN encompasses who have philosophy degrees and are doing interesting things within companies (eg they have successful financial careers).

        Second, there could be a solid argument that philosophy teaches a useful way of thinking.

        Third, if we want to move the goal posts of this discussion to universities, I could go on for quite awhile about ineffective practices and ways they set students up to fail as well. My main concern is the students. Seeing students at any level from early childhood to university and beyond taken advantage/set up to fail/screwed over/bamboozled gets me fired up.

        BTW, I checked out your webpage and enjoy the Spartan nature of it. The "end of page" is a nice touch I haven't seen before.

        [0] http://www.paulgraham.com/disagree.html

        • SamReidHughes 1528 days ago
          I hate to break it to you heymijo, but I am more of an expert on disagreeing than Paul Graham is.
      • bawolff 1528 days ago
        This is rather obnoxious.

        First off, philosophy is an interesting subject in its own right. You're probably not going to get a good job in it. However nobody goes into philosphy thinking they're going to become a millionaire.

        The issue in this thread is that lambda school isn't as described. Tricking people is very different than teaching people some esoteric stuff they know upfront is kind of useless pragmatically

  • wpietri 1528 days ago
    I really had a lot of hope for bootcamps in general and ISAs in specific. I thought the alignment of incentives might make for radically more effective education.

    I was very wrong. The ISA incentive appears to be nothing to the VC/startup incentive to Show! Massive! Growth! as you chase ever-larger chunks of money. Somehow we've gone from "move fast and break things" (which is not a terrible slogan to encourage experimentation on non-consequential things) to "move fast and break people" (which horrifies me).

    • ergocoder 1528 days ago
      A capped ISA seems superior than student loan. I wish gov would implement that instead of a non-bankruptable loan.

      I hope this doesn't make people discard the ISA idea altogether because of a bad implementation that is unrelated to the ISA itself.

      When talking about student debt forgiveness, I think it's too extremely. We can make it milder like forgiving interest or converting it to some sort of a capped ISA. This is a much less controversial idea than forgiving the whole debt that I'm not sure I agree with.

      • wpietri 1528 days ago
        That would be a step forward. But a government-backed ISA is very much like a special-purpose income tax. If we're going to that, I say we just go all the way.

        I think of education as like roads, policing, and courts. It's fundamental societal infrastructure. Because the benefits are widespread and diffuse, charging directly for it is difficult. As with primary and secondary education, I think it's ultimately easier to just pay for it as a society and get it back in taxes later.

      • alexhutcheson 1528 days ago
        > We can make it milder like forgiving interest or converting it to some sort of a capped ISA.

        That exists: https://studentaid.gov/manage-loans/repayment/plans/income-d...

        • ergocoder 1528 days ago
          Wait, so why are there many complaints about student debt loop?

          A capped ISA (like what Lambda offers) would be livable and capped.

          Why does everyone not get onto this program?

          • alexhutcheson 1528 days ago
            There are significant differences:

            - With the Lambda ISA, your remaining balance is forgiven after 2 years of payments, while the federal income-driven repayment plans require 20-25 years of payments.

            - Lambda ISA has a fixed dollar "cap" (currently $30k), but the "cap" for income-driven repayment plans is however much you borrowed + interest that accrues over the life of the loan.

            - Most importantly, the Lambda ISA is for a much smaller amount of money. Very few of the news articles about student debt profile students with a balance of only $30k. The horror stories tend to be students who borrowed >$100k, often for graduate study.

          • dnautics 1528 days ago
            Mostly optics, I'd say, because it's more obviously fractional slavery than how nondischargeable debt is.
        • the_watcher 1528 days ago
          It's not remotely the same. IBR is not capped, takes 25 years for forgiveness, requires payments the entire time (regardless of whether or not you have an income), and the amount forgiven is treated as taxable income (so you get a tax bomb when you actually receive the benefit).
          • learc83 1528 days ago
            This is all wrong

            >IBR is not capped

            It's capped at the 10 year pay off amount.

            > takes 25 years for forgiveness

            That's only for people who borrowed before 2014. For people after it's only 20 years.

            >equires payments the entire time (regardless of whether or not you have an income)

            Nope. Deferment time counts towards the 20 years. And you will never be required to make payments if you have no income.

            >the amount forgiven is treated as taxable income (so you get a tax bomb when you actually receive the benefit)

            Nope. Only the amount forgiven up to the point of solvency. If you don't manage to pay off your debts in 20 years time, you likely lack assets, which means almost none of it will be treated as income.

            • lazyasciiart 1528 days ago
              > Nope. Only the amount forgiven up to the point of solvency. If you don't manage to pay off your debts in 20 years time, you likely lack assets, which means almost none of it will be treated as income.

              That's not so likely, really. Assets counted in solvency include your car, your laptop, your clothes, retirement accounts like 401ks and even the value of any life insurance policy held. Standard financial advice is to contribute to retirement before paying above the minimum on student loans, and often even to put away additional savings as well.

              • learc83 1528 days ago
                If your income is so low that you didn't paying off your Federal student loans after 20 years of income based repayment, you aren't contributing much if anything to a 401k, and you owe more on your car than it's worth. Fair market value of your clothes is barely worth considering.

                If you make enough that you have significant assets, you almost certainly make enough that you'll be paying the max under the income based repayment plan, and you'll pay off your loans in 10 years.

                Remember that it's assets minus liabilities just before the discharge, which means the discharged debt counts. The minimum payment is 10% of your discretionary income, and if 10% of your discretionary income didn't pay that loan debt after 20 years, it's very unlikely your income was high enough to build assets that are significantly greater than said loan.

                • lazyasciiart 1527 days ago
                  I think you're assuming that people would have fairly consistent incomes, whereas many of them are going to start by making almost nothing, letting the loan+interest pile up, and then once they make a decent income they'll follow advice to pay minimums on student loans and save simultaneously. It's only an issue for people with larger student loans, but 25% of people have >$50k in loans - and unfortunately not all of them are doctors.
                  • learc83 1526 days ago
                    The dependent student lifetime limit is $31k btw so you'd need to have basically no income for 10 years to raise it to $50k, or you'd need to be older or go to grad school.

                    Either way it's unlikely that you spend much time not making enough to cover interest payments with the minimum payment.

                    In the case that you do spend years with basically no income, you aren't likely to start making enough to build assets significantly faster than you are paying down your loan because the minimum payment are pegged to income. Most people with low enough income for this to be problem are saving at most few % in their 401k, and are renting a home.

                    I'm not saying that this can never happen, but you'd need to perfect storm of circumstances for it to be a major issue. And regardless, the tax burden is never going to be more than around ~25% of your assets--even in the worst case.

                    >25% of people have >$50k in loans - and unfortunately not all of them are doctors

                    That's including private loans, which don't come with income based repayment, so it's irrelevant.

    • _bxg1 1528 days ago
      I still think ISAs as a concept make a lot of sense. It seems like most of the problem is that the classes are often worthless, not the particular way in which you pay for them. There was the whole thing with the collections agencies but that can happen with any type of loan.
      • wpietri 1528 days ago
        I was hoping that the ISAs would fix the worthless-classes problem. My theory was that if the institution's compensation was more directly tied to how much they helped the student, they'd be better at helping students.

        Unfortunately, there's still a fundamental broken feedback loop here: the people purchasing an education are definitionally unqualified to evaluate it. I don't see a way to fix that without significant regulation, which unfortunately acts as a brake on evolution of both program content and educational methods.

        • _bxg1 1528 days ago
          Yeah, that's part of why Lambda's ISAs came into the spotlight recently: they were turning around and selling them immediately, which broke that incentive alignment that students may have been counting on.
  • jfarmer 1528 days ago
    What's craziest to me is that someone thought you could put together two groups of students in a high stakes situation without first socializing the interaction.

    Half the point of school is to get students to first fail in a low-stakes way.

    Groups need time to develop. Any change in a group will cause it to storm before re-norming.

    The higher the stakes the more critical it is to navigate storming effectively. You "learn by doing", i.e., by getting students to storm 50 times before the the stakes are high.

    Students should not have to pay the price for someone else's crash course in learning design.

  • waterside81 1528 days ago
    For anyone else wondering ... an ISA is an Income Share Agreement. Lots of comments here mentioning this but I didn’t know what it stood for
  • tchaffee 1528 days ago
    Can someone confirm or correct my suspicion? That the founders are interested in education finance reform and not so much education? Are any of them former teachers? What's their background in pedagogy? It's cool to hack code, systems, and to hack together a software product. This feels like they are hacking people's lives and futures and if you're going to do that, maybe some credentials are called for. Happy to be corrected if the founders have a long history of involvement in education.
  • djeikyb 1528 days ago
    Kim Crayton has done great analysis of this type of code school on her podcast, including interviews with students:

    https://hashtagcauseascene.com/podcast/?s=bootcamp

    https://duckduckgo.com/?q=site%3Ahttps%3A%2F%2Fhashtagcausea...

  • Antoninus 1528 days ago
    Obligatory: https://twitter.com/lzsthw/status/1212284566431576069?lang=e...

    and Lambda School fits into many of the described.

  • jsjddbbwj 1528 days ago
    She opens the thread by stating that she is a black woman from the Bronx. Then there's nothing in the thread that says she's been treated differently for being black, for being a woman, or for being from the Bronx.
    • why_only_15 1528 days ago
      I think her point was that she didn't have a lot of options in the first place as a black woman from the Bronx, and Lambda could potentially have offered her more opportunity than places in the past.
      • oh_sigh 1528 days ago
        Being a black person in the Bronx doesn't have anything to do with not having a lot of options. Being a poor person - anywhere - regardless of skin color, usually does that.
    • matz1 1528 days ago
      Merely stating that she is a black woman from the Bronx means she has been treated differently ?
      • jsjddbbwj 1528 days ago
        Why open the thread with that, if it's of no relevance to the story? When I see that in the first post, I think the story will be full of racism, sexism and classism. But nope. Nothing.
        • matz1 1528 days ago
          Because she think its important, she can write however she want.
          • jsjddbbwj 1528 days ago
            And I can criticise it. :-)
      • oh_sigh 1528 days ago
        As a biracial black and asian man living in Hanoi, I really wonder why you put a space before your question mark?
    • miguelmota 1528 days ago
      She's just giving a little bit of context of where she’s coming from.
    • tchaffee 1528 days ago
      She introduced herself with a little background. So what?
    • juped 1528 days ago
      It explains why she would take the dubious bootcamp route.
    • tootahe45 1528 days ago
      There's your problem. She wanted to be treated differently.
  • minimaxir 1528 days ago
    This thread touches on the point the other discussions about ISAs don’t: these aren’t free bootcamps because there’s opportunity cost, and that can be unexpectedly expensive.
    • prostheticvamp 1528 days ago
      I don’t think there’s a single discussion about boot camps that doesn’t discuss the immense cost of having to take months away from your money-earning life.

      Why do you feel that this is an under appreciated topic?

      • heymijo 1528 days ago
        If it is as you say, an immense cost, can it really be an under appreciated topic?
        • prostheticvamp 1528 days ago
          Yes.

          Did you mean to say “can it be over-appreciated”?

          It can be that, too. It ain’t slavery.

          • heymijo 1528 days ago
            Yes, that is what I meant.

            Your last line jumps the shark.