CourseVerdict

ChatGPT Prompt Engineering for Developers vs MITx MicroMasters Program in Statistics and Data Science

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 (with OpenAI) · AI & ML Courses

ChatGPT Prompt Engineering for Developers

4.4/ 5 · 44 opinions
33 positive8 neutral3 negative/ 44 total

MIT (MITx / IDSS) on edX · AI & ML Courses

MITx MicroMasters Program in Statistics and Data Science

4.2/ 5 · 34 opinions
20 positive8 neutral6 negative/ 34 total

Per-criterion

Content quality4.3 / 5

Two core principles (write clear and specific instructions, give the model time to think) plus modules on iterative prompt development, summarizing, inferring, transforming, expanding, and building a chatbot. Reviewers praise the clarity and the runnable Jupyter notebooks. The honest limit is depth: it was built in April 2023 on GPT-3.5 Turbo and does not cover newer patterns like tool calling, structured outputs, or reasoning models.

Instructor4.8 / 5

Isa Fulford (OpenAI) and Andrew Ng (DeepLearning.AI) are about as authoritative as the field gets. The teacher-student dynamic — Ng asking the clarifying questions a beginner would ask while Fulford demonstrates — is repeatedly cited as a strength that mirrors how learners actually think.

Value for money5.0 / 5

Free on the DeepLearning.AI platform with every code example runnable in-browser, no API key or local setup required. Reviewers consistently call out "the best part is that it's free" as a decisive advantage over the paid prompt-engineering courses that flooded the market in 2023.

Support3.3 / 5

Being a one-hour self-paced short course, there is no graded assignment, cohort, or mentor support. The OpenAI and DeepLearning.AI community forums are active and useful, but learners are largely on their own. For a course this short the need is limited, but there is no structured help.

Real-world use4.2 / 5

Six practical use cases implemented end-to-end give learners patterns they can apply the same day. Developers report it directly improved their ability to build LLM features. The caveat is that the API-level patterns are a foundation, not a production blueprint — several reviewers wanted more on structuring LLMs into real applications.

Content quality4.6 / 5

Graduate-level MIT courses in probability, statistics, and machine learning taught at on-campus rigor. Instructors include John Tsitsiklis (EECS), Philippe Rigollet (Mathematics), and Nobel laureate Esther Duflo. Content quality is consistently praised as exceptional; pacing and deadlines are the only structural critique.

Instructor4.7 / 5

Faculty are active MIT researchers — Tsitsiklis (National Academy of Engineering), Rigollet (Statistics/ML intersection), Duflo (Nobel Prize 2019), Barzilay (MacArthur Fellow). Reviewers single out Tsitsiklis as "really good at explaining complicated concepts in an intuitive way" and lecture videos as genuinely engaging.

Value for money4.2 / 5

$1,350 bundle (or $300/course) for four MIT graduate-level verified certificates plus a proctored capstone credential is exceptional value versus campus tuition. Pathway credit at MIT SES doctoral program and 70+ partner universities adds tangible ROI beyond the certificate itself.

Support3.1 / 5

Pre-recorded lectures with active discussion forums and TA participation — no live office hours. Learners report forums as "helpful" but the absence of real-time support is felt during the hardest courses (18.6501x). Limited submission attempts (1-3 per problem) with strict two-week deadlines amplifies the support gap.

Real-world use3.8 / 5

Strongly theoretical — produces deep statistical and mathematical foundations rather than production engineering skills. Reviewers note "very little practical value" for immediate TensorFlow/PyTorch workflows, but the mathematical grounding is indispensable for applied research, academia, and senior data science roles requiring first-principles reasoning.

Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.