TS, siguro kasi
ang programming ay mas bagay sa "trade school" or vocational or "boot camp" style na school.
Iba kasi ang gamit ng college/university, mas general ang objective, hindi focused sa hands-on training lang.
Pati life skills, critical thinking, languages, humanities, science, general intellectual development etc.
[Colleges] "are not simply for the education of students. This is an essential function, but
the raison d’être of a college is to nourish a world of intellectual culture; that is, a world of ideas, dedicated to what we can know scientifically, understand humanistically, or express artistically. In our society, this world is mainly populated by members of college faculties: scientists, humanists, social scientists (who straddle the humanities and the sciences properly speaking), and those who study the fine arts."
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Kung preparation lang para sa employment:
"we could provide job-training and basic social and moral formation for young adults far more efficiently and cheaply, through, say, a combination of professional and trade schools, and public service programs."
Kung baga sa atin, TESDA yung malapit dyan. Kahit wala kang college degree pwede kang mag program.
College/univ = "life-ready"
Trade/Vocational = "job-ready"
Yung mga BS IT/CS course na seryoso yung curriculum (hindi diploma mill) mas malalim sa programming lang ang tinuturo. May pag formulate/optimize ng algorithm, design ng prog. language mismo, mga math/calculus. Kasi for example yung Relational Database (SQL) na gawa ni E.F. Codd e based sa relational algebra (math). May mga computer engineering concepts (gates, transistors, chips, etc.). May software engineering na nag bui-build ng large scale systems (hindi yung coding lang), may architecture design, scaling,
etc., etc.
Siguro rin 2 years pa lang naman ang experience mo so
siguro mostly coding pa lang ang ginagawa mo.
(I-correct mo na lang ako kung may iba ka pang activity aside from coding.)
Meron pang ibang fields or experiences ka pang dadaanan: Systems analysis, software requirements gathering (interview ng users, E-R modeling, OO design, use-cases, etc.), software entrepreneurship (startup pitching, business models), circuit design, systems & network stack design, data center design/mgmt, storage network design, ASIC/FPGA/embedded programming, project management, ITIL service management, IT governance, people management, IT security, learning management systems and training, IT accounting systems,
etc., etc.
Yan pa lang yung off the top of my head, maraming marami pa at sa IT/CS field pa lang yan.
Mapapansin mo din may mga makikilala kang
non-IT, non-CS na programmer din, kasi na boot camp or self study lang nila ang coding (mga BS Physics, Math, Nutrition, Biology, Education, Accounting, etc.)