B
B
blinusya2017-10-01 18:32:33
IT education
blinusya, 2017-10-01 18:32:33

The problem with self-learning. How to proceed?

Hi all!
My name is Ilya, I'm in the 10th grade. I have some issues with self study, freelancing and school.
I have a small stack of knowledge in the WEB environment. I work with jQuery, Gulp, Git, preprocessors, etc.
Earned on i7 this already: D That is, there are already some achievements.
I do not know what to do. I have a profile class (physics and mathematics), I chose it specifically so that later I could enter some technical university.
I'm thinking of becoming a programmer, even taking into account the fact that there is very little real knowledge there.
The education of a programmer makes it possible to work for a state company and go abroad on a work visa, as I know.
At the exam, I need to take physics. You have to devote some time to it too.
The problem itself - should I get hung up on admission or should I continue to develop more diligently on my own in this topic? Employers often need not my education, but real experience and modern knowledge.
How do you think?

Answer the question

In order to leave comments, you need to log in

5 answer(s)
M
mafusailmagoga, 2017-10-01
@mafusailmagoga

Well done for your zeal.
But I have to disappoint you - pure self-learning at an early stage is the worst thing that can happen to you.
Go get a job in an office (albeit not a full-time job).
Work there in-person, not remotely. At least 2 years minimum. Before you go freelancing and self-study.
Choose an office so that there are experienced colleagues. Many experienced colleagues desirable.
With them you will quickly take off - you will save yourself just YEARS.
I met freelancers who were engaged in self-study for 5 and 7 and 10, and one even 15 years.
Here are the first two - at the level of students from my office, who work with us for 2 years.
The third and fourth also did not go far - I rate them as middles. Although over the years they could have become normal programmers.
The education of a programmer makes it possible to work for a state company and go abroad on a work visa, as I know.
Well, it also broadens your horizons and introduces you to interesting people.
That's all.
As vocational training, a university is very useful insofar as it is.

D
dadster, 2017-10-01
@dadster

Do not take the easy path, you will always have time to quit. Go to college, work at the same time, develop. If, for example, in your 2nd year you already have your own startup, or you are called to work full-time, you can always leave the institute. And so, to be left without a higher education simply because you don’t want to take physics ... Not a very far-sighted decision.

J
just_hank_moody, 2017-10-01
@just_hank_moody

I think it's worth focusing on admission. In addition to knowledge, study also provides connections. Those who studied with you may then go to other areas of activity, but if you become a programmer there is a big chance that they will come back to you with a request to do something for big money.

G
Griboks, 2017-10-01
@Griboks

School and university are like heaven and earth. The levels of knowledge and responsibility are completely different. Obviously, you should do it if you can.

D
devalone, 2018-02-10
@devalone

I advise you to enter and study for at least a year or two, then you yourself will understand whether it is necessary or not.
Advantages of a university:
- it's easier to quit with a diploma
- it's easier to participate in various kinds of competitions, CTF, for example, now universities are very supportive and financially help students (pay for trips to other cities, etc.)
- if you're lucky and there will be understanding and able to explain teachers , then it will be a little easier to study than on your own
- sometimes there is such equipment (all sorts of servers), to which you are unlikely to just be allowed to work without knowledge, but at the university it’s quite
Cons:
- a bunch, just a bunch of any humanitarian garbage that you have to take , but sometimes such teachers require more than on specialized subjects
- there is not much free time to study what you are interested in, and if you still try to combine it with work, it will be generally difficult
- some teachers consider it necessary to go to lectures and listen to their boring mumbling for 1.5 hours, this time could be spent with where more useful
To a government company? Work for food? Well, it's like that. And you can go abroad anyway, a work visa requires a diploma only in some countries such as Germany. But of course, it is easier with a diploma, because. there are, for example, immigration programs, like Express Entry in Canada, where a diploma is required.

Didn't find what you were looking for?

Ask your question

Ask a Question

731 491 924 answers to any question