<b>Donald Nunn</b><br />Sun Certified Programmer for the Java 2 Platform
Mark Herschberg, author of The Career Toolkit
https://www.thecareertoolkitbook.com/
Originally posted by Joshua Kueck:
I got my BS in computer science last May. I had a 3.8 and received the Computer Science Award for the school. However, because I changed from an art major at the beginning of my junior year (no starving artist of me), I have no real software development experience. I've been stuck in the "we cant hire you because you dont have any experience"/"I cant get any experience because noone will hire me" scenario. I am hoping getting my Java certification will help me out, as Im getting married in like 3 months
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Originally posted by Mark Herschberg:
Generally speaking, I liken a CS degree for a software engineer to a physics degree for a mechanical engineer. It's the basis and theory, but doesn't cover many practical skills.
Of course, EJB, JSP, Servlets, JDBC aren't core skills either, no more so then assembly language. I'm not saying don't study them, just that these aren't a replacement for where the CS degree programs come up short.
--Mark
Originally posted by Mapraputa Is:
Perhaps it would make more sense to teach practical skills first - EJB, JSP, Servlets at all. for, say, two years, and allow for the next level only after few years of working experience.![]()
Originally posted by Joshua Kueck:
Well, it wasn't really a big jump for me. I have been playing/building computers since I was little. I just never really got interested in it until I took a programming class and was flying through it while everyone else was failingAs far as art went, I must have one 20 different art awards my last two years of highschool (a coupel grand
) But, in college, I wasn't having any fun in my art classes. They were so far behind me, it was just a waste of money. A couple classes I was even helping teach. I don't want to lose my passion for art.
www.websiteandsound.com
"If you do what you've always done, you'll get what you've always gotten."
Uncontrolled vocabularies
"I try my best to make *all* my posts nice, even when I feel upset" -- Philippe Maquet
Originally posted by Mark Herschberg:
I can't tell you how many candidate I rejected because they couldn't explain what a hash table -yes, you do use them regularly.
--Mark
Any posted remarks that may or may not seem offensive, intrusive or politically incorrect are not truly so.
RusUSA.com - Russian America today - Guide To Russia
Originally posted by Shura Balaganov:
Mark, hate to come across your path in other threads.... I'll promise not to do it on purpose![]()
Originally posted by Shura Balaganov:
Interesting, so CS graduates are it... How about thousands of Indians, Pakistanies, Chinese and Russians who have very solid science/engineering degrees, like Math or EE? My younger brother is graduating from Drexel with CS degree (and it is considered one of the better IT schools), and I personally know how TERRIBLY POOR his education is.
...
And you are talking about hashtables...
Rob
SCJP 1.4
www.websiteandsound.com
"If you do what you've always done, you'll get what you've always gotten."
Originally posted by LutherAdon:
I would hope you folks would consider ITI an exception when you say you are mostly looking to hire people with a computer science degree.
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You learn UML, Access (including VBA), DB2, VB 6.0, Java, VisualAge for Java, ASP, JSP and others. YOu also get used to getting project requirements, meeting deadlines, and working in teams.
Matthew Phillips
Originally posted by Matthew Phillips:
What is the general feeling about an Associate's Degree in CS?
Matthew Phillips
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