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Is it possible to work in the West in the field of IT without a specialized diploma?
Hey! I have a medical university degree, bachelor's degree. So I just have a higher education. Now I have 2.5 years of experience in mobile development, currently working on xamarin and developing as a pro-platform developer. Remote work with a foreign company. I'm interested in how much the lack of a formal specialized IT education can interfere with employment in the USA or in Asia. There is no desire to go to the correspondence department of the university just for the sake of crust, because the university program, to put it mildly, did not impress me, except for mathematics (which studies well in online courses), there is nothing fundamentally new, and most of the technologies taught there are outdated 15 years ago. Is it true that the consulate may simply not give a visa just because I do not have an IT diploma?
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It all depends on the country, for example in the Netherlands, there are no requirements for the presence of specialized higher education. The main thing is that you get an offer from an employer who will already justify that you are needed.
In Germany, a specialized diploma is required. I heard someone managed to get around, but in general this is an obstacle.
In the USA, a profile diploma is an important, but not mandatory option. It's very hard to find a company that fits in doing H1B for you. But even if you find, not the fact that you get. Lottery. + what else will Trump come up with))
In Asia, they don’t demand anything, at least in countries like Vietnam, Thailand. If you aim at Singapore, then everything is complicated there and seems to be required.
As a person who was looking for and finding work abroad (USA), I will say that a diploma is not necessary, but welcome. An American diploma will give you +1 karma, a Russian diploma will give you +0.
Work experience and the presence of completed projects will give +100 karma.
You can find remote work through freelancing, through acquaintances and / or speaking at various events, i.e. becoming an expert in the field. For example, fixing bugs in xamarin.
If you want to get H1B then you need to be an expert. If your average market value is less than $100k, no one will take you seriously. Getting an H1B takes a year, maybe more. For the employer, it costs about $5,000 + a headache. If you are serious about obtaining such a visa, consider the option of long-term remote full-time work. Think of it as a 5 year commitment. Think twice.
In order to find out, first find an employer, and if he needs you, all other questions are his task. If he needs a diploma, but you don't, look for another employer. Try! You have nothing to lose, but gain experience.
Why not try to find an employer in the field of medicine? For example, a developer of medical devices. What device is now without a processor ... Or just a software developer for medicine. You look and the diploma and knowledge of medicine will come in handy. In this case, it is a useful advantage to understand two neighboring areas.
Is it possible to work in the West in the field of IT without a specialized diploma?If the "West" can be called Japan, then no. They have a system of employment, tougher than in the USSR. Even if the employer agrees to give you a work visa, it will only come from diplomas. The daughter makes websites because she graduated from college with a degree in web design. The institute's diploma entitles her to work as a systems programmer. University degree - teaching language. The employment service will not give permission for other specialties.
Instead of some citizens talking at length about what they don't know, one simple rule that applies to those very labor markets is to know:
x years of relevant proven experience for each year of study.
For example, in the USA it is 12 years, emnip. EU 6 or 8, I don't remember.
Everything will depend on your employer.
There are no hard requirements. Unless it's Google or Microsoft and the like. Although there are exceptions. First of all, your brains will be appreciated, no matter how funny it sounds :)
Your projects in which you took part will say more about you. Or they did it on their own.
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