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Is a professional retraining diploma valued?
I do not work by profession, i.e. I have a non-core higher education and therefore I am thinking of getting a Russian diploma of prof. retraining in the profession "local area network engineer", is it worth bothering with this and paying for it, or does it make no sense? Will employers look into this? I do not live in the Russian Federation, if I move to the Russian Federation, will such a diploma be useful to me so that I am not immediately weeded out because of a non-core higher education?
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Certificates from Mikrotik and tsiska are higher than this diploma
Knowledge, skills, abilities and experience are valued. And not only.
Here two schoolboys finished school. They bring you a document "completed secondary education".
Do you think this document can be used to understand whether they know everything they were taught?
Do you have standouts or losers?
So any other document simply means that you have a secondary or higher education.
What kind of knowledge you actually have (and at work you need to do work and not write off homework), diplomas are not shown, therefore they are valued only as an indicator that you probably studied.
In IT, experience is more valued. The ability to think and search for information is also valuable (but not everywhere, unfortunately). A diploma can show that you have studied some specific issue, for example, 1C certificates, Cisco certificates, MS SQL administration certificates are valued. The general "engineer of local computer systems" in the presence of any other higher education is absolutely useless, it can even be perceived negatively.
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