Answer the question
In order to leave comments, you need to log in
What are the first steps of a novice system administrator?
Good evening.
I’m finishing grade 11, my parents advise me to go to university, but I won’t pull it due to lost knowledge
at the moment I’m actively closing gaps in school knowledge I’m
actively interested in administration, maintaining servers
for myself, I chose the path to go to college at a university with a bias in it and only after college
Naturally, my parents are against entering a university .
Correctly, I act as a novice system administrator (enikey) that I go after grade 11 to a technical school and not to a university?
Answer the question
In order to leave comments, you need to log in
You have to go to a technical school after the 9th grade ...
Now you lose as many as 3 years of your life, and in just a year you can become a specialist in the field, two good, three very experienced.
I would recommend trying to get into college.
As a last resort, go to a technical school, but pull up the knowledge for this year a little wider than the technical school program, and try to enter a university next year.
Well, as a system administrator, in any case, study it yourself. It is not directly taught in technical school or university.
My first higher education had nothing to do with the IT field.
Yes, it was almost non-existent then)))
From the second year I began to closely engage in administration, and by the end of my studies there was already a follow-up job. I got most of my knowledge from the forums. There were no webinars then)
If you are afraid not to pull full-time - go to correspondence. Requirements below.
Tech is not an option. You won't be interested. Raise the bar, do not look for easy ways. )))
But a full-time university education is not only knowledge in your subject, but also a general level of development, broadening your horizons and communicating with smart people)))
It is usually more interesting to communicate with smarter people than to look smarter than others)))
Well, English is a must. B2 level is desirable, but B1 will do for a start.
What are your plans for the future?
What do you like to do? Well, put your hand on your heart.
The parents are fucking right. You have to listen to your mom, that's all. Anyway. Your life and disassemble jambs all the same to you.
Consider giving up on DevOps or QA. A system administrator is such a thing that the competition is high, and the salary in general is not that ...
Don't waste your time in college. In the profession, you need a university (for formal compliance), experience and personal qualities. While you can live with your parents - study at a university, do not rush to break into the world of system administration. At least 3-4, but you can finish the university. At 2/3/4 courses, you will learn how teachers relate to combining study and work and gradually join the profession.
The level of knowledge and the technical school and the university give a very conditionally relevant, because in IT everything changes very quickly. You will need to specialize on your own and keep your knowledge up to date.
Do not invent adventures, go to university.
I once went to technical school after 9 classes. And even in my case, this step turned out to be a waste of time. And after 11 it's a loss squared. Then I still needed a university. So the most correct option, IMHO, is to immediately go to university. In addition, the direction of enikey - forget it right away, this is for fools, you need to keep the bar higher ...
Enikey does not need education at all - he is already hired. The administrator needs a higher technical degree, and moreover, it is desirable in the profile (automation, communications, programming). Yes, they don’t teach you to be an administrator anywhere, but when applying for a job they require a higher technical degree - I certainly don’t mean offices of the “three tables, two chairs” level.
Therefore, the technical school will not give you absolutely anything - anyway, then you will need a university, unless you can enter right away from the third course.
Didn't find what you were looking for?
Ask your questionAsk a Question
731 491 924 answers to any question