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Espleth2015-04-24 22:02:06
Programming
Espleth, 2015-04-24 22:02:06

Is it worth it to transfer to part-time and go to work?

Now I'm finishing my first course.
Theoretically, if I transfer to part-time and go to work, then in 3 years I will have a tower and 3 years of work experience in my specialty. Of course, the received diploma will not be as valuable as the full-time one of my university, but as far as I know, they don’t really look at a diploma in IT, and I will need it mainly in order to have more opportunities to move abroad.
What about in practice? Can anyone share experience?
The option to stay at the university and work 20 hours a week is not very suitable for me, since I’m unlikely to find a job closer than 1.5 hours from the university, and I don’t really want to constantly travel back and forth. I also have doubts about working remotely: I think not many people need an under-joon working 20 hours a week, and even remotely.

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6 answer(s)
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veitmen, 2015-04-24
@veitmen

In short, study calmly and try to work as much as you can. And yes, don't forget to stretch. Everything has its time.

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Optimus, 2015-04-24
Pyan @marrk2

If the army does not threaten you and the classic student time does not attract, then yes, you can go to work. On the other hand, in life you will still have time to work out and learn from the points already)) Such a decision is usually linked to the financial situation of the family ...

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mamkaololosha, 2015-04-24
@mamkaololosha

There's nothing wrong with an afterschool/evening. Only here you need to clearly understand that science and science-intensive industries are left behind. And you go to "middle class IT", where 5-7 years of work experience is equivalent to 2-3 years in top IT. You heard right. A lead from a "medium-sized" company may turn out to be just a junior or a middle in the same Google.

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Nikolay Talanov, 2015-04-24
@Ronnie_Gardocki

>I also have doubts about working remotely: I think not many people need an under-joon working 20 hours a week, and even remotely.
Rave. With 5 months of experience, I got a job remotely. The first month I worked 30 hours a week, mostly to impress. Then during the year I worked 15-20 hours a week, there were no problems at all. The main thing is to find such a vacancy (naturally, they will pay a little by the standards of a Moscow city, but it’s excellent for the region). The easiest option is to support projects and lazily file new ones. Check Brainstorage periodically, you will find something.
Oh yes, it is absolutely not necessary for the employer to know your output in hours (if we are talking about a fixed salary). You complete the tasks - everyone is happy - no one asks anything and you get money + experience.

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Sergey, 2015-04-25
@serega-kn

Learn and look for a job remotely, start learning web development, HTML, CSS, then bootstrap, and other CSS frameworks, then js and further further further. Instead of tanks and serials, watch tutorials, since their mass is simple. By the 3rd year I found a normal job remotely. Participate in various conferences, live a normal student life. 3rd year student.

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Dum_spiro_spero, 2015-04-25
@Dum_spiro_spero

Learn-learn and learn. The first course is about nothing just yet ... You have not started normal core subjects. As for work - you need to understand that projects are interesting and developing - but there are ... all the rest - and while you have little knowledge, then what you can / makes sense to entrust - most likely you will not be developed. But the question is, what are you interested in next? IT is big and sprawling.
As for what kind of diploma a person has and where he studied ... there is a tricky moment. As a rule, you can immediately see - who studied normally at a day school in a good university, and who - somewhere else. They will say in the eyes - but what's the difference - the main thing is that a person be smart. And in fact - it immediately becomes approximately clear what a person is capable of next. As a rule, a correspondence university means there are no brains to study full-time, and you want money right now - i.e. no will.
Studying - develops a breadth of views, outlook, etc ... Ie. as a result, such a comrade can be entrusted with specific pieces - done, thanks. But no initiative, no perspective, no leadership - because his initiatives will most likely be stupid due to the narrowness of thinking.
In general, brainick wrote everything correctly.

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