My Self-Created Artificial Intelligence Masters Degree
My Self-Created Artificial Intelligence Masters Degree
My Self-Created Artificial Intelligence Masters Degree
. . .
Note: This article is a perpetual work in progress and is up to date as of 17 May 2019.
2019 Update: I’ve added some more curriculum and other resources (the Learning How
to Learn course and the 100-page machine learning book). They are all still in order of
completion.
2018 Update: 9-months into my curriculum, I got hired as a Machine Learning Engineer
at Max Kelsen, a technology company in Brisbane!
. . .
Me in 15-seconds
I live in Brisbane, Australia.
I graduated in 2015 with a Dual Major in Food Science and Nutrition. It took me five
years to do a three-year undergraduate degree.
I’m a fitness nut. And I love food. Marrying my love for food and fitness with my studies
was one of the best I ever did.
The most valuable lesson I learned from five years as an undergraduate was if you’re
truly interested in what you’re learning, studying is no longer a chore.
If you had told me this piece of wisdom before starting university, I would’ve listened
and understood but not put it into action. I was still under the impression studying would
always be a painful task. Wisdom must be learned not taught.
. . .
Advancements in AI have been happening for decades. Computing power has only
recently reached a stage where it is accessible enough to enable people like me to work
on these technologies from my bedroom.
Rather than stand by and watch this paradigm shift happen without fully understanding
it, at the start of 2017, I decided to start learning about it.
. . .
My Goals
1. Be dangerous enough to use AI as a tool to bring value to the world. I’m not
learning these technologies for the sake of learning. I’m going to use what I learn to
build something epic.
2. Combine AI with my knowledge of fitness and nutrition to help the world move
more and eat better. I know I won’t ever be the worlds leading expert in AI or
fitness or nutrition as singular disciplines but I can be a leader in the crossover of
the three.
. . .
My Curriculum
I went in reverse when I began my studies. I dived straight in the deep end (literally) and
signed up for a Deep Learning course without ever writing a single line of Python code.
I scared myself to the point I emailed support asking whether I was eligible for a refund.
Luckily, I didn’t take the refund.
After learning more about the field, I matured a little and started to get an idea of where
I want to take my studies. More thought is starting to go into where I spend my time.
I’m not looking to be the best Artificial Intelligence Engineer or the most hireable. My
focus is a foundation of knowledge I can use to build things.
My curriculum is not as robust as it could be, instead, it’s being built on the fly, learning
what I need to know to get to the next step.
If you have any advice for me, including courses I should look at or skills I should work
on, please feel free to let me know in the comments, my email or Twitter.
Key
• = course fully completed
• ✳
️ = course partially completed or in progress
. . .
Foundation Courses
• Udacity Programming Foundations with Python [Free]
• CS50 [Free]
• CS50 [Free]
Two incredible resources for starting to learn Computer Science and programming. Sources: Treehouse, Harvard CS50
Why these?
At the beginning of 2017, I had no idea what data science was, let alone AI. I wrote my
first line of Python code in February. These courses are to give me a foundation across
Python programming, Computer Science and Data Science.
. . .
Advanced Courses
• Andrew Ng’s Machine Learning on Coursera [Free]
• ✳
️ Fast.ai Deep Learning Course (part 2) [Free]
• ✳
️ Applied Data Science with Python on Coursera [Cost]
• ✳
️ Fast.ai Machine Learning Course [Free]
Three of the best resources to learn AI online. Sources: Udacity, deeplearning.ai, fast.ai
Three of the best resources to learn AI online. Sources: Udacity, deeplearning.ai, fast.ai
Why these?
I stumbled upon Udacity’s Deep Learning Nanodegree Foundations (DLND) and was
won over by Siraj Raval. I had a slight interest in AI and machine learning but his
introductory videos on YouTube got me hooked. This was the first course I started with.
From the DLND, my learning journey has grown with a focus on the crossover of AI and
health.
. . .
Books
• Learn Python the Hard Way by Zed Shaw [Cost]
• Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach by Peter Norvig and Steven Russell [Cost]
Currently Reading
• Hands-On Machine Learning with Scikit-Learn and TensorFlow by Aurélien Géron
[Cost]
Why these?
Sometimes a more traditional route is needed rather than always being in front of a
screen. Zed’s book on Python helped immensely alongside the Treehouse Python track.
The last time I did a statistics course was the first semester of my undergraduate
degree. I failed. Naked Statistics has helped me start to think with more of a statistics
mindset. It’s written a way that takes away the jargon and gives real-world examples of
complex statistics concepts.
Deep Learning with Python is perhaps the best introduction to AI, Deep Learning and
Python so far. Its author, François Chollet, is the author of Keras, a popular deep
learning framework and currently works on deep learning at Google.
Hands-on Machine Learning is another incredible resource. This book is most aligned
with what I do day to day as a Machine Learning Engineer.
The Hundred-Page Machine Learning Book is a new edition for 2019. I wish I had this
book when I started out. You can read it in a day. We’re getting one for the office and
going to use it as a go-to resource.
. . .
Math
• Khan Academy Introduction to Matrices [Free]
Why these?
My high school math skills needed some refining once I started learning about Machine
My high school math skills needed some refining once I started learning about Machine
Learning and Deep Learning. Thanks to various frameworks and libraries, much of the
math work is done behind the scenes.
Having a general understanding of the math that goes into these technologies has
helped me immensely.
. . .
Extras
• Brisbane AI Meetup [Free]
• FreeCodeCamp [Free]
Why these?
My personality type is ENFP. Essentially, I’m more extroverted than introverted (only
slightly). Too long in front of a computer screen and I get weird. As previously
mentioned, I’m using Meetup to find and meet people who are interested in what I am.
Siraj Raval is a wizard. His YouTube channel was my main inspiration for learning about
AI and eventually creating my own AI Masters Degree. Watching his videos led to me
documenting my learning journey on YouTube. If you’re looking to learn more about AI,
I’d highly recommend his channel.
I’ve already mentioned the most valuable skill I learned after five years of university was
learning how to learn. But I figured it out the hard way. The Learning How to Learn
course on Coursera should be a compulsory course for every student. Learning How to
Learn is the ultimate skill because you can apply it to anything else.
The use of cloud technologies is a requirement for any machine learning engineer or
data scientist. If you want people to use the things you make, you have to distribute
them. Cloud computing helps you do that. I’ve chosen Google Cloud to be my current
them. Cloud computing helps you do that. I’ve chosen Google Cloud to be my current
cloud vendor. And I used the Google Cloud Data Engineering Specialization on
Coursera to upskill myself. To see more, see the article, How I Passed the Google
Cloud Data Professional Certification Exam.
. . .
What my Trello board looks like as of 13 September 2017 (it gets updated as I learn/add more to
the curriculum).
. . .
I’m not going to learn this unless it’s on the final exam.
I did, however, use two main criteria when deciding how I was going to learn.
1. Cost
2. Flexibility
Based on my previous experience at university, it was anything but flexible. Strict due
dates, medical certificates for basically any absence, strict class times, one-time-only
lectures, a 70-minute round trip commute from where I live to my closest campus, etc.
These are not bad things but when you compare it to the alternative of online learning,
things start to look a little different.
Online learning was the clear winner in terms of flexibility. Being able to study at my
own pace is a big plus. I slow down on the concepts I have trouble with and fast on
everything else. I miss a deadline because of an unforeseen event? It’s on me. No one
else.
Online learning is not all roses. What you gain in flexibility, you lose in actual human
interactions. After a day of studying in front of my computer, results in me becoming an
introverted zombie. I’m using local Meetups to compensate for this.
Online learning also doesn’t come with as much prestige as what would a university
(yet). Some of the courses I’ve completed don’t provide a verified certificate. I’m not
worried about that. My goal is to gain enough knowledge to put these technologies into
practice and bring value to the world.
. . .
I pay for all of my courses up front. To do this, when I started the curriculum, I drove
Uber on the weekends. And after being hired as a Machine Learning Engineer I still pay
for them up front.
. . .
What’s next?
You can consider this article a work-in-progress of my self-created AI Masters Degree
curriculum. I’ll keep it updated as I go along with the courses I’m learning and the
projects I’m working on.
I’m sharing my journey through weekly YouTube videos and daily blog posts.
. . .
Have advice for me or learning about AI? I’d love to hear
from you!
Say Hi on: YouTube | Twitter | Email | GitHub | Patreon | LinkedIn
Say Hi on: YouTube | Twitter | Email | GitHub | Patreon | LinkedIn
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