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Should I go to college after 9 to become a programmer?
I study at school, at the age of 11 I started to teach programming (myself, self-education), I myself am now in the 8th grade. I always wanted to go to the 11th grade, but now I don’t think so, I want to leave after 9 to be a programmer. Everyone in my family says that I will regret it. Are there any prospects, and will I be able to get a job without a tower? somehow encourages you to go to grade 11, this is what programmers are in bulk right now, and employers will choose from guys who graduated from universities ...
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1. Knowledge is never superfluous, and a university can give direction to knowledge.
2. I don’t know how it is now, but before the 1st year of a technical school (the fashionable name is “college”), it was equal to 10 and 11 grades of the school. And if you have a license (or as it is correctly called), to issue these certificates from a technical school, you can have a certificate of completion of grade 11 after the first year. That is, try to go to the university faster.
3. The educational institution itself and the years in it is nothing if you are not personally interested in the profession being taught. Moreover, the delivery of all tests "on the top five" also means little. If you do not personally develop in these years, mastering relevant technologies / knowledge in parallel with your studies. If you do not find a job according to your profile (half-time, remotely, freelance). Then, even when you leave with a red diploma, you can lose a lot to practitioners with 9 classes, which you spent all these years on practice and self-education while you were sitting your pants at the university.
4. If you want to migrate abroad over time (this is a very popular topic for discussion in the programming environment), then the university certificates will be a big plus when obtaining a Visa / Residence Permit.
5. In most companies in the CIS, especially in small or medium-sized companies, they don’t give a damn about the crusts of the university, the main thing is knowledge and experience. In my opinion, this is probably 95% of the labor market. In large giants like Google, Yandex, Wargaming, etc., they ask for a university or at least a secondary technical one in their specialty.
6. To cut sites on Wordpress in the company " sp Ivanov ", there will be enough crusts about the end of 9 classes.
The IT industry is experiencing a staff shortage that is growing every year. Employers look less and less at gender, age, diploma and other factors that do not affect the level of professionalism.
In colleges, they teach 300 percent worse. You can forget about serious universities. You will swim in knowledge at the level of a sixth grader. If at school, for the sake of the teacher's award, you are a little pulled up, then in college, it doesn't care at all about your academic performance. There's a principle - just to go. We expelled people after 3 years a week before graduation.
Nobody needs a tower either, just to have it.
"college" is a fashionable name for a bursitet?) Do you believe in the system of secondary vocational education in the country?
11 classes, then uni. not the closest, but the best in your future specialty from parents available for money.
py.sy. Yes, when applying for a job, they will not look at the diploma. but if you work hard, sooner or later you will have to present this piece of paper. managers who manage programmers suddenly earn more.
College provides benefits in the short term. University - in the long term.
And time in college or university can be spent oh how differently.
And, in my opinion, it is better to spend grades 9-11 and the first courses of a university on studying fundamental knowledge, knowledge that is learned once and for a lifetime: mathematics, physics, Russian and English.
With such a foundation, it is already possible to determine in the direction of programming - of which there are a lot, because the word "programmer" in itself is something completely abstract, it all depends on specialization.
in fact, the process of education is a personal task for everyone. educational institutions actually teach what books to look at and give teachers who you can ask and then test on some key positions. Therefore, you need to study yourself, first of all.
no one and nothing forbids studying at home, performing some test tasks, in the process of mastering some programming language, and then, when you feel that you have the strength for more, take and do freelance work in your free time.
Therefore, the decision should be made by yourself and not ask someone for advice :)
you can study at school and college, learn Python + Django, make websites, earn your first money, and then when you have exactly formed an understanding of what exactly you need, then consolidate all the knowledge at the institute.
therefore, the choice is simple - self-study and self-development in the first place, and then you already need to understand whether you need a diploma or knowledge. knowledge is primary, a diploma is like a piece of paper proving that such knowledge really exists
In general, teaching in an average school is much worse than in an average vocational school, not to mention specialized institutions. For various reasons, including organizational ones.
Therefore, it is possible and convenient to go to the tower after an adequate college - you will improve your knowledge.
In general, in theory, no one should interfere with you after two years of college. Or does the college not give a program for grades 10-11?
PS If you have been studying programming since the age of 11, it is possible that in college they will not tell you anything new in the field of programming.
I think it was important to leave after the 9th grade, when after graduating from college you could immediately enter the 3rd year of the university. Now this option has been removed. And if in the future you plan to get a higher education, then going to college is a waste of time.
And that after vocational school we were forbidden to finish the university? Are you sure such a law exists?
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