Data Scientist with Python vs Associate Data Scientist in Python
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
DataCamp · AI & ML Courses
Data Scientist with Python
DataCamp · AI & ML Courses
Associate Data Scientist in Python
Per-criterion
Twenty-three courses and 116 hours cover the full data science stack from Python fundamentals to machine learning and SQL, authored partly by writers of well-known books like "Introduction to Machine Learning with Python." Multiple reviewers praised the logical progression, though some noted that advanced topics feel shallow and certain exercises become repetitive.
DataCamp uses specialist instructors per course rather than a single host, including book authors Andreas C. Müller and Allen B. Downey. Presentation quality is consistently high and polished. The trade-off is less personality continuity across the track compared to a single-instructor alternative.
At roughly $27.50 per month billed annually, the subscription unlocks 670+ courses across Python, R, SQL, Tableau, Power BI, and AI. Learners who treat the platform as a multi-track investment get strong value; those who only want this one credential may find the subscription model less compelling.
There is no live instructor access, no real-time Q&A, and the community forum is asynchronous with variable response times. Self-directed learners who rarely get stuck cope well, but several reviewers flagged feeling isolated when encountering unfamiliar concepts mid-track.
The track covers pandas, NumPy, scikit-learn, SQL, and Git — genuine industry-relevant tools. However, multiple experienced reviewers noted significant gaps: no command-line experience, no local environment setup, no cloud platform exposure, and pre-cleaned datasets that do not simulate real messy data.
23 courses are logically sequenced from Python basics through scikit-learn modeling, and the introductory material is genuinely well designed. Reviewers flag repetition between short videos and exercises, and that theory and methodology are treated as secondary to mechanics.
DataCamp uses a specialist instructor per course rather than one host, so presentation is clean but uneven — some instructors are gifted teachers, others are experts who simply present. There is no live instructor or cohort, which leaves some learners wanting guidance.
At roughly $25/month billed annually the subscription unlocks 670+ courses, not just this track, so the break-even is only a handful of courses a year. The monthly plan is poor value by comparison, and the completion certificate carries limited standalone weight with employers.
The in-browser sandbox removes all setup friction, but support is self-directed: no live instruction, no cohorts, no real-time instructor Q&A. Self-motivated learners cope; those who get stuck have little to fall back on beyond asynchronous help.
Guided projects use real datasets (housing prices, insurance claims, LA crime, penguin clustering) and build a portfolio. But fill-in-the-blank exercises do not fully build independent coding muscle, and reviewers warn you will not be a job-ready data scientist on the track alone.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.