Why We Publish Our Complete Program Details

When a graduate lists the AI Engineering Bootcamp in the Education section of a résumé or LinkedIn profile, a recruiter should be able to answer three questions in under a minute: What was taught? How was it assessed? What does the credential certify?

Most intensive programs cannot answer those questions publicly. Their websites are written to convert applicants, not to inform the people who will later evaluate their graduates. The result is a credibility gap: a graduate claims a rigorous educational experience, and the employer finds a landing page.

That is why the complete educational profile of our program - structure, admissions standards, curriculum, assessments, portfolio requirements, capstone, faculty, learning outcomes, and the credential awarded - is published on a single page: Program Details.

What we publish, and why it matters

Program structure. The AI Engineering Bootcamp is a one-year, full-time program: 48 weeks, 40 hours per week, 1,920 instructional hours, organized as four 12-week terms. Duration and contact hours are the first things an evaluator uses to distinguish a program of study from a short course.

Admissions. Enrollment requires a three-stage admissions process: application review, a timed coding assessment, and a live technical interview. Selectivity is meaningless if it is not documented.

Assessment. Every module is graded. Students complete weekly assignments, practical coding assessments, peer reviews, a midterm project, and final assessments, and the results appear on an official transcript. Competency-based assessment is what separates completing a program from attending one.

The credential. Graduates receive a Certificate of Completion, an official transcript, and a verifiable digital credential. Employers can verify any graduate's record by contacting the Institute directly.

A single page graduates can cite

Our graduates reference one URL when describing their education. That page does not change based on marketing campaigns. It reads like an academic catalog because it serves the same function as one: a stable, precise, verifiable description of an educational program.

If you are a recruiter or hiring manager evaluating a candidate who lists this program, start with the Program Details page. If anything there is unclear, write to us. The admissions office answers verification requests as a matter of policy.