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Comment Re:consultancy (Score 1) 370

Certifications are THE way to stay gainfully employed in tech...hands down. But NOT because they really do anything for you, they are a quantifiable credential for HR and headhunters. HR is the first and most difficult task in the employment process. Certs are cheap and have a good ROI both in time and money outlay. Some are harder than others but I know guys working for code farms or support companies with nothing more than a couple of certs...no degree and no plans to get one. Degrees are nice but the curriculum stays a bit behind unless you're at an expensive research university like MIT. Certs are always industry current and tells an employer you can do the job.

Comment Re:Programming as a vocation! (Score 1) 491

Employers need workers with practical experience, and in general WANT workers who have lots of experience with specific software. Colleges don't teach software suites, they teach theories.

I did an associate's in programming and I had several classmates who graduated from the local university with a CS degree. They all said the same thing: "I need actual skills because graduates from THIS school are taking most of the local jobs." They had 2 Java classes and a ton of theory where I had 4 java classes (and certification), 4 .NET classes, 3 database classes, etc. All things being equal, the bachelor's degree gets trumped by the associate's/Java certification combination most of the time. BTW, I also have a 4-year degree in humanities so I'm not bashing the 4-year process at all, but recruiters always take the easy way out. They are in a volume business and need to fill the seats with tangible skills. But as to the "shortage", I wonder how many people get out of college and just don't like the field anymore and take another direction (like me)?

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