R
R
Ruslan2015-05-29 18:12:05
IT education
Ruslan, 2015-05-29 18:12:05

Do I need a master's degree to immigrate?

Hello!
Here is my brief background. In that year, he became a bachelor of physics, entered the magistracy in the same direction, but soon decided to change his specialty: he realized that it was IT that was closer. I dropped out of university, spent my free time on online courses: Java, C ++, Python, algorithms, discrete, even machine learning, refreshed the matan and the ruler, well, and on trifles.
Now I hope to enter the Computer Science Center (like ShAD, only in St. Petersburg). I passed the interview, the results, unfortunately, only after a month and a half (I think there are chances). We will assume that they will still take it (if not, then the issue will become much less relevant).
Now closer to the question. In the future, I do not want to be limited in mobility, that is, I want to be able, if desired, to leave to work over the hill. First of all, I mean the EU countries. Possibly USA and other countries. For this, of course, it is very good to have a higher education. Hence the following questions:

  1. On the one hand, I already have a high school, but on the other hand, this is a bachelor's degree and, moreover, not IT (albeit a technical specialty). Will it greatly increase my chances of getting a specialized master's degree?
  2. If so, is there any difference whether I will study full-time or part-time?
  3. CSC, as far as I know, does not have state. accreditation and is generally not positioned as a magistracy. Does this mean that their diploma will not be any help in getting a job abroad and obtaining a residence permit?

I ask because if I enter the CSC, I will not have much to do in the magistracy. The Center teaches very cool + a lot of practice, so I will not refuse this place in any case. Yes, and I have no problems with self-education. Therefore, if you go to the magistracy, then only for the sake of crust, and it will become much more difficult to work in parallel with your studies in two different places.
Thank you!

Answer the question

In order to leave comments, you need to log in

3 answer(s)
D
Dmitry Chernyak, 2015-05-29
@ZUSS

In Europe, various references, certificates, diplomas, etc. are looked at with great respect. If you plan to get a job, then the "papers" attached to the CV and translated, as well as links to publications (of course not in Russian), or for example a link on youtube with a training video (you can also in Russian :-) ) give your summary is an additional, significant chance.
It is best if you can confirm your diploma. Many Russian technical diplomas are automatically recognized. But this needs to be clarified.

M
mamkaololosha, 2015-05-29
@mamkaololosha

No, it doesn `t need. You will prove your skills face-to-face or on Skype. A diploma is only needed for a visa.

S
sim3x, 2015-05-29
@sim3x

1. With a master's degree, you simply have the opportunity to migrate to doctoral studies in the EU / USA / Japan
2. The correspondence form is always suspicious - it is worth looking at specific precedents with students
3. It is generally worth talking to professors here - they may have connections on a personal level, which can provide much better conditions for moving you to a university abroad

Didn't find what you were looking for?

Ask your question

Ask a Question

731 491 924 answers to any question