AI Python for Beginners vs MIT 6.S191 Introduction to Deep Learning
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
DeepLearning.AI · AI & ML Courses
AI Python for Beginners
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (introtodeeplearning.com) · AI & ML Courses
MIT 6.S191 Introduction to Deep Learning
Per-criterion
AI Python for Beginners is a four-part course (roughly 17–20 hours of material, structured as 11 short lessons each under five minutes plus hands-on labs) covering the basics of AI Python coding, automating tasks, working with data and documents, and extending Python with packages and APIs. Reviewers at The Interview Guys call it "one of the best entry points into Python that exists right now for non-developers," and the DeepLearning.AI community reviewer RussellJ described the content as "accessible, creative, fun, and practical," noting he "gained more Python knowledge than expected." The course is built from the ground up around learning to code alongside an AI chatbot — covering variables, functions, loops, data structures, pandas, matplotlib, requests, Beautiful Soup, and LLM/API calls — which independent reviewers agree mirrors how modern professionals actually write Python. The deliberate trade-off is breadth: it omits OOP, testing, SQL, and version control by design.
Andrew Ng — co-founder of Coursera, founder of Google Brain, and former Chief Scientist at Baidu — is the marquee instructor, and his name is a recognized quality signal in hiring. The DeepLearning.AI community reviewer praised him as "one of those rare individuals who is an expert in his field yet knows how to instruct those with much less knowledge." The LinkedIn write-up by learner Aliyu specifically credited Ng's "renowned teaching style for clarity and simplicity." The one honest caveat raised in the community review is a title-level joke clarification (Ng founded Google's "cat project" but Jeff Dean was the engineer nicknamed "the cat man"), not a criticism of the teaching itself. The integrated AI chatbot that explains concepts and debugs code in real time was repeatedly called "revolutionary" by reviewers.
The course is offered free on DeepLearning.AI's short-courses platform, and on Coursera it runs about $49/month (or is included with Coursera Plus at $199/year) for the graded certificate track. The Interview Guys review concludes "the ROI math works here," rating it 8.0/10 for non-developers and noting that at $49 for ~20 hours of instruction the value "is hard to beat anywhere." For a free or near-free course taught by one of the most recognized names in AI education, value is the single strongest dimension. The one qualification: the certificate is a learning signal, not a professional credential, so the value is in skills acquired rather than résumé weight for technical roles.
The course is hands-on from the first lesson: learners build a custom recipe generator, a smart to-do list, a vacation/itinerary planner, poem and children's-story customizers, and a travel-log data analyzer, all inside browser-based Jupyter notebooks with embedded videos and no local installation required. Class Central's coverage notes the course is "neatly structured and self-contained, featuring over 27 code examples and 8 graded assignments." Reviewers consistently praised the in-browser environment — RussellJ said "I really like DeepLearning.ai's learning platform." The limitation is that the projects are intentionally small and AI-scaffolded, so learners get less raw from-scratch repetition than a traditional bootcamp would provide.
For knowledge workers — marketing analysts, operations coordinators, business analysts, healthcare administrators — the AI-assisted Python skills are a meaningful differentiator, and reviewers agree the methodology of coding alongside an AI assistant "directly mirrors how modern professionals are expected to work." However, The Interview Guys review is explicit that "this course will not get you a data analyst job on its own" and rates it just 5.5/10 for career changers targeting data roles, flagging gaps in SQL, data-visualization depth, OOP, frameworks, and version control. The consistent expert advice is to treat this as a confidence-building first step and to plan a learning roadmap beyond it for anyone targeting a role where Python is the primary skill.
Reviewers consistently praise that the curriculum is refreshed annually and reaches modern topics — Transformers, generative modeling, LLMs, AI for science — that older courses do not cover. The honest catch is that depth is sacrificed for breadth in eight lectures.
Alexander Amini is described as clear, energetic and good at building intuition from first principles. The recurring caveat is the rotating-lecturer format — multiple reviewers wish Amini taught every lecture rather than alternating with guests and co-instructors.
Completely free — lectures on YouTube, slides on introtodeeplearning.com, labs on GitHub, runnable in free Google Colab. No paywall on any core material. The optional MIT Professional Certificate is not the path most reviewers take.
There is no official forum for online learners. Reviewers credit the GitHub issue tracker as the de facto Q&A channel, but multiple 2024-2025 issues report unresolved bugs in the PyTorch Sequential labs and outdated Colab dependencies.
Three Colab labs (music generation, vision, LLMs) are short but hands-on in both TensorFlow and PyTorch. Reviewers note this is a foundation, not a job-ready portfolio — you finish with intuition and small projects, not a deployed model.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.