One the job training is fine if you expect to be programming for only 5-10 years. A 30-50 year career requires a foundation that you are unlikely to get on the job. If you love programming, get your CS degree.
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Replying to @awbjs
For a more nuanced take,
@chancancode's blog post on computer science education is pretty interestinghttps://medium.com/@chancancode/rethinking-computer-science-education-319a60709b30 …2 replies 6 retweets 32 likes -
Rather than Uber-like disruption to save the day, NA should rather finally get a public education system that actually works. This discussion wouldn't be come back that often if degrees were affordable to begin with. This is the thing people should be fighting about.
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Not everyone can afford to start their programming career with four years of unpaid, highly time consuming work. This is especially true about people coming to programming as an adult.
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My mother tried to switch careers here in France and failed to do so, so I'll agree with you on that. Still, US degrees costing more per year than what you need to survive during that period of time sounds utterly insane to me.
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State schools don't, but you still need to do schoolwork instead of paid work.
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