7/6/2026 at 3:18:08 AM
I have a similar trajectory. I attended two very competitive military schools in Brazil but never finished and moved to America.Today I’m a senior software engineer at a FAANG company. The lack of diploma has never been a barrier and I progressed very quickly in the company from junior to senior (4 years).
But this has always been a perceived pain point and limiter for me so I decided to get a CS degree during COVID online from a college from Brazil. Just finished last week :)
I do look for a stronger school name on my resume and got accepted at Johns Hopkins Masters in AI (online). Anyone had any experience with that program? Thoughts?
by theflyingpigeon
7/6/2026 at 5:12:48 PM
I am in a similar boat where I never completed my degree. I am from Asia. As far as I know even if a job does not require a degree, lots of countries do require Bachelor's degree to get a work visa, for example, for USA it's either bachelor's or 3/4 years of experience per university year I think. I would appreciate if you could share your story of how you moved to America.by dorjoy
7/6/2026 at 4:07:16 AM
Congrats! I am also an autodidact who desired a stronger school name on my resume after a long run in startups, so I took a senior engineering role at Johns Hopkins.I'm not affiliated with the engineering school or familiar with their curriculum. It may not be as famous as the schools of medicine or public health, but in general they are quite good.
by alchemism
7/6/2026 at 3:32:35 AM
> Johns Hopkins Masters in AI (online)do whichever one of these online MS which permit you to leave off the "online" part (i.e., are awarded through the conventional faculty). i'm not sure johns hopkins does but OMSCS from gatech does.
by mathisfun123
7/6/2026 at 6:45:54 AM
GaTech only permits OMSCS if you have a 4 year undergrad. In many countries undergrads are three years. Even you have a Master's, that is also not counted. 4 years undergrad or nothing.by __rito__
7/6/2026 at 10:49:48 AM
Yup, in Europe I think almost every undergrad is either 3 years, or 3.5 if you are to get engineer title afterwards.But then Masters is way more common to do afterwards compared to American system where it's rarity.
by StefanBatory
7/6/2026 at 10:59:52 AM
It is 4 years in Brazil. Sometimes 5.There are 3 years non-BS degrees though.
by oceansky
7/6/2026 at 5:51:35 PM
My country only recently switched to 4-year undergrad for all streams. Previously, only Engineering had it (not counting professional degrees like Medicine, Accountancy, etc.)by __rito__
7/6/2026 at 12:07:56 PM
[dead]by Lazurus
7/6/2026 at 3:31:54 AM
> got accepted at Johns Hopkins Masters in AI (online). Anyone had any experience with that program? Thoughts?Not worth the tuition.
GATech and UT Austin is highly respected and they only costs $6k and $10k respectively for their OMSCS.
The only online CS degree programs I can think of that are actively taught by top faculty and don't break the bank are GT, UT Austin, and UIUC.
by alephnerd
7/6/2026 at 3:39:39 AM
Agree on the list, I would say GT is hardest to get in, but most inexpensive. While the later two are much easier.I also suggest reading Dr. Joyners’ Reddit posts and books, they helped me quite a bit and I do want to reiterate that if you need help on admission and completed the EDX cs50(?) course, you can personally email him, as it’s stated on one of the last slides.
All around an amazing program that I hope to one day do, but I went the UIUC for business for now.
by rootsudo
7/6/2026 at 7:30:05 AM
> I would say GT is hardest to get in, but most inexpensive. While the later two are much easier.Regarding the acceptance rates, it's actually the opposite. GT OMSCS has a very high acceptance rate (~80%) and UIUC and UT Austin online masters are much more selective (~30%).
by EB66
7/6/2026 at 3:40:39 AM
For break-the-bank options, Stanford and Columbia have good programs too.If you're looking at the potential returns to a graduate degree in a high paying field, $60k spread over a few years isn't an insane investment, but yes, it is worth considering the value vs. GATech/UT Austin.
by jmalicki
7/6/2026 at 3:41:54 AM
Columbia as a program isn't worth $70k in tuition, and the Columbia name doesn't open any doors that GT or UT Austin couldn't unless you live in NYC or China.Stanford HCP is great (I've worked with plenty of their grads), but a large portion end up switching to FT because Stanford is a once in a lifetime experience.
by alephnerd
7/6/2026 at 5:20:15 AM
I had an unrelated undergrad did my MSCS online (not JHU but same idea). It was great. But if you’re already senior at FAANG I’m not sure you need further legitimacy.by appplication
7/6/2026 at 6:54:37 AM
The actual education can be useful. I dont think my masters degree has ever landed me job. But I would not have been able to deliver many of the things that got me a leadership position, nor be as capable as an engineer as I am today without the experience. The milage obviously varies greatly here based on where one goes.by SolarNet
7/6/2026 at 10:50:57 AM
It depends, as always. My Masters degree at a Polish (good) university was... Let's say I didn't learn anything during these three semesters and the only upside is that I have paper now.by StefanBatory
7/6/2026 at 11:40:47 AM
> But if you’re already senior at FAANG I’m not sure you need further legitimacyFor rat raceing the pyramid it is still a differentiator at executive level.
Nobody wants to be held accountable, if projects go south, for having promoted to a leadership position a self taught engineer.
It's really about politics and accountability more than anything.
by epolanski
7/6/2026 at 10:26:09 AM
So you got into one of Faang before 2020’s hype? Not surprising that you could do that without any degree. Nowadays there are so many smart guys from unis and colleges like Standord or MIT who couldn’t get into even a small company. “No degree but no problem” sounds like totally ignoring your own luck.by stonecoldman
7/6/2026 at 1:41:34 PM
I think attributing it to luck is a bit uncharitable. They described getting in on talent over credential. I also don't hold a degree. I've worked with a handful of Ivy League interns over the years and none of them blew me away. Certainly none were at the level I was at when I interviewed without a degree. I think I'm _fortunate_ to have gotten into the work without a degree, but it wasn't _luck_, it was ability.by cml123
7/6/2026 at 11:37:48 AM
The current market values experience (if there's any position at all) above 0 experience leetcode black belts.by epolanski
7/6/2026 at 12:40:31 PM
But layoffs create a market where people have both experience and good degrees.by f6v