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    • scottalanmillerS
      scottalanmiller @NerdyDad
      last edited by

      @NerdyDad said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

      @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

      @NerdyDad said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

      @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

      @NerdyDad said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

      @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

      @NerdyDad said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

      @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

      @alex.olynyk said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

      Group Policy, sorry thats vendor specific

      Yes, and higher end. Very systems admin focused. Think what we'd expect from someone who wanted to enter university.

      But coming from somebody that went through college, they are only going to teach you theory and principles and nothing too much vendor specific. If they do teach something vendor centric, then it will more than likely be Linux-based at it is easier to get your hands on (legitimately anyways) and deploy while sticking with the principle/theory.

      VERY much the opposite. Windows and Cisco are taught at university 10:1 over Linux. They are PAID to be sales people for those vendors. And universities can't afford to hire Linux skills, but Microsoft and Cisco are a dime a dozen. So they teach whatever professors are unemployed on the market at the time.

      College should only teach theory and principles. And that's all we are looking for here. If a college teaches hands on useful stuff, it's violating its mandate (outside of using them to demonstrate theory.)

      I NEVER had a MS lab with servers or Hyper-V or anything. If I touched Linux, then it was through Cygwin. That was it. Otherwise, it was theory and principles.

      How do you "touch Linux" through cygwin? Cygwin is an application layer for Windows only.

      The only point of using Cygwin was to teach on how Linux's file systemS are different than Windows.

      But Cygwin sees the Windows NTFS filesystem, not a Linux one. There is no Linux, at all, with Cygwin. What the heck did they think that they were showing to you?

      And I barely made a B in the class because the teacher was not good at teaching. He had a difficult time explaining the same thing in different ways so that his students would understand how the principle worked. However, a lab would still have been very valuable for this class, even if the professor hosted it themself.

      Probably not, since he apparently didn't know the subject matter well enough to even know what to have put in the lab!

      NerdyDadN 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • NerdyDadN
        NerdyDad @scottalanmiller
        last edited by

        @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

        @NerdyDad said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

        @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

        @NerdyDad said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

        @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

        @NerdyDad said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

        @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

        @NerdyDad said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

        @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

        @alex.olynyk said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

        Group Policy, sorry thats vendor specific

        Yes, and higher end. Very systems admin focused. Think what we'd expect from someone who wanted to enter university.

        But coming from somebody that went through college, they are only going to teach you theory and principles and nothing too much vendor specific. If they do teach something vendor centric, then it will more than likely be Linux-based at it is easier to get your hands on (legitimately anyways) and deploy while sticking with the principle/theory.

        VERY much the opposite. Windows and Cisco are taught at university 10:1 over Linux. They are PAID to be sales people for those vendors. And universities can't afford to hire Linux skills, but Microsoft and Cisco are a dime a dozen. So they teach whatever professors are unemployed on the market at the time.

        College should only teach theory and principles. And that's all we are looking for here. If a college teaches hands on useful stuff, it's violating its mandate (outside of using them to demonstrate theory.)

        I NEVER had a MS lab with servers or Hyper-V or anything. If I touched Linux, then it was through Cygwin. That was it. Otherwise, it was theory and principles.

        How do you "touch Linux" through cygwin? Cygwin is an application layer for Windows only.

        The only point of using Cygwin was to teach on how Linux's file systemS are different than Windows.

        But Cygwin sees the Windows NTFS filesystem, not a Linux one. There is no Linux, at all, with Cygwin. What the heck did they think that they were showing to you?

        And I barely made a B in the class because the teacher was not good at teaching. He had a difficult time explaining the same thing in different ways so that his students would understand how the principle worked. However, a lab would still have been very valuable for this class, even if the professor hosted it themself.

        Probably not, since he apparently didn't know the subject matter well enough to even know what to have put in the lab!

        Team up with Mike Rowe and create MangoU has an IT Trade school for the different facets of IT. You want to be a programmer? Take this course. You want to go into networking? Go into this program.

        coliverC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
        • coliverC
          coliver @NerdyDad
          last edited by

          @NerdyDad said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

          @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

          @NerdyDad said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

          @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

          @NerdyDad said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

          @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

          @NerdyDad said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

          @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

          @NerdyDad said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

          @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

          @alex.olynyk said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

          Group Policy, sorry thats vendor specific

          Yes, and higher end. Very systems admin focused. Think what we'd expect from someone who wanted to enter university.

          But coming from somebody that went through college, they are only going to teach you theory and principles and nothing too much vendor specific. If they do teach something vendor centric, then it will more than likely be Linux-based at it is easier to get your hands on (legitimately anyways) and deploy while sticking with the principle/theory.

          VERY much the opposite. Windows and Cisco are taught at university 10:1 over Linux. They are PAID to be sales people for those vendors. And universities can't afford to hire Linux skills, but Microsoft and Cisco are a dime a dozen. So they teach whatever professors are unemployed on the market at the time.

          College should only teach theory and principles. And that's all we are looking for here. If a college teaches hands on useful stuff, it's violating its mandate (outside of using them to demonstrate theory.)

          I NEVER had a MS lab with servers or Hyper-V or anything. If I touched Linux, then it was through Cygwin. That was it. Otherwise, it was theory and principles.

          How do you "touch Linux" through cygwin? Cygwin is an application layer for Windows only.

          The only point of using Cygwin was to teach on how Linux's file systemS are different than Windows.

          But Cygwin sees the Windows NTFS filesystem, not a Linux one. There is no Linux, at all, with Cygwin. What the heck did they think that they were showing to you?

          And I barely made a B in the class because the teacher was not good at teaching. He had a difficult time explaining the same thing in different ways so that his students would understand how the principle worked. However, a lab would still have been very valuable for this class, even if the professor hosted it themself.

          Probably not, since he apparently didn't know the subject matter well enough to even know what to have put in the lab!

          Team up with Mike Rowe and create MangoU has an IT Trade school for the different facets of IT. You want to be a programmer? Take this course. You want to go into networking? Go into this program.

          How valuable is that really? The people who need structured courses to learn are most likely going to have a very hard time with a fluid IT environment. I think most people could benefit from an internship long before they would benefit from a structured course.

          scottalanmillerS NerdyDadN 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • scottalanmillerS
            scottalanmiller @coliver
            last edited by

            @coliver said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

            @NerdyDad said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

            @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

            @NerdyDad said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

            @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

            @NerdyDad said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

            @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

            @NerdyDad said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

            @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

            @NerdyDad said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

            @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

            @alex.olynyk said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

            Group Policy, sorry thats vendor specific

            Yes, and higher end. Very systems admin focused. Think what we'd expect from someone who wanted to enter university.

            But coming from somebody that went through college, they are only going to teach you theory and principles and nothing too much vendor specific. If they do teach something vendor centric, then it will more than likely be Linux-based at it is easier to get your hands on (legitimately anyways) and deploy while sticking with the principle/theory.

            VERY much the opposite. Windows and Cisco are taught at university 10:1 over Linux. They are PAID to be sales people for those vendors. And universities can't afford to hire Linux skills, but Microsoft and Cisco are a dime a dozen. So they teach whatever professors are unemployed on the market at the time.

            College should only teach theory and principles. And that's all we are looking for here. If a college teaches hands on useful stuff, it's violating its mandate (outside of using them to demonstrate theory.)

            I NEVER had a MS lab with servers or Hyper-V or anything. If I touched Linux, then it was through Cygwin. That was it. Otherwise, it was theory and principles.

            How do you "touch Linux" through cygwin? Cygwin is an application layer for Windows only.

            The only point of using Cygwin was to teach on how Linux's file systemS are different than Windows.

            But Cygwin sees the Windows NTFS filesystem, not a Linux one. There is no Linux, at all, with Cygwin. What the heck did they think that they were showing to you?

            And I barely made a B in the class because the teacher was not good at teaching. He had a difficult time explaining the same thing in different ways so that his students would understand how the principle worked. However, a lab would still have been very valuable for this class, even if the professor hosted it themself.

            Probably not, since he apparently didn't know the subject matter well enough to even know what to have put in the lab!

            Team up with Mike Rowe and create MangoU has an IT Trade school for the different facets of IT. You want to be a programmer? Take this course. You want to go into networking? Go into this program.

            How valuable is that really? The people who need structured courses to learn are most likely going to have a very hard time with a fluid IT environment. I think most people could benefit from an internship long before they would benefit from a structured course.

            I agree, while part of me would LOVE to work on a structured learning school for IT and have certainly considered doing it... the majority of people in IT need to work their own way up and learn things on their own. But providing a guide so that people know what it takes to be considered "viable" as a baseline is a place to start.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
            • NerdyDadN
              NerdyDad @coliver
              last edited by

              @coliver said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

              @NerdyDad said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

              @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

              @NerdyDad said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

              @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

              @NerdyDad said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

              @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

              @NerdyDad said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

              @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

              @NerdyDad said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

              @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

              @alex.olynyk said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

              Group Policy, sorry thats vendor specific

              Yes, and higher end. Very systems admin focused. Think what we'd expect from someone who wanted to enter university.

              But coming from somebody that went through college, they are only going to teach you theory and principles and nothing too much vendor specific. If they do teach something vendor centric, then it will more than likely be Linux-based at it is easier to get your hands on (legitimately anyways) and deploy while sticking with the principle/theory.

              VERY much the opposite. Windows and Cisco are taught at university 10:1 over Linux. They are PAID to be sales people for those vendors. And universities can't afford to hire Linux skills, but Microsoft and Cisco are a dime a dozen. So they teach whatever professors are unemployed on the market at the time.

              College should only teach theory and principles. And that's all we are looking for here. If a college teaches hands on useful stuff, it's violating its mandate (outside of using them to demonstrate theory.)

              I NEVER had a MS lab with servers or Hyper-V or anything. If I touched Linux, then it was through Cygwin. That was it. Otherwise, it was theory and principles.

              How do you "touch Linux" through cygwin? Cygwin is an application layer for Windows only.

              The only point of using Cygwin was to teach on how Linux's file systemS are different than Windows.

              But Cygwin sees the Windows NTFS filesystem, not a Linux one. There is no Linux, at all, with Cygwin. What the heck did they think that they were showing to you?

              And I barely made a B in the class because the teacher was not good at teaching. He had a difficult time explaining the same thing in different ways so that his students would understand how the principle worked. However, a lab would still have been very valuable for this class, even if the professor hosted it themself.

              Probably not, since he apparently didn't know the subject matter well enough to even know what to have put in the lab!

              Team up with Mike Rowe and create MangoU has an IT Trade school for the different facets of IT. You want to be a programmer? Take this course. You want to go into networking? Go into this program.

              How valuable is that really? The people who need structured courses to learn are most likely going to have a very hard time with a fluid IT environment. I think most people could benefit from an internship long before they would benefit from a structured course.

              Okay, so how about some kind of work/study program? Team the student up with half a day in the field, behind a helpdesk or something and the other half in school. The time they spend in the field pays for the schooling with maybe a little extra for themselves plus a 2nd job to live or something.

              I'm not married to one solution. Just like love, IT will find a way.

              coliverC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • coliverC
                coliver @NerdyDad
                last edited by

                @NerdyDad said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

                @coliver said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

                @NerdyDad said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

                @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

                @NerdyDad said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

                @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

                @NerdyDad said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

                @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

                @NerdyDad said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

                @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

                @NerdyDad said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

                @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

                @alex.olynyk said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

                Group Policy, sorry thats vendor specific

                Yes, and higher end. Very systems admin focused. Think what we'd expect from someone who wanted to enter university.

                But coming from somebody that went through college, they are only going to teach you theory and principles and nothing too much vendor specific. If they do teach something vendor centric, then it will more than likely be Linux-based at it is easier to get your hands on (legitimately anyways) and deploy while sticking with the principle/theory.

                VERY much the opposite. Windows and Cisco are taught at university 10:1 over Linux. They are PAID to be sales people for those vendors. And universities can't afford to hire Linux skills, but Microsoft and Cisco are a dime a dozen. So they teach whatever professors are unemployed on the market at the time.

                College should only teach theory and principles. And that's all we are looking for here. If a college teaches hands on useful stuff, it's violating its mandate (outside of using them to demonstrate theory.)

                I NEVER had a MS lab with servers or Hyper-V or anything. If I touched Linux, then it was through Cygwin. That was it. Otherwise, it was theory and principles.

                How do you "touch Linux" through cygwin? Cygwin is an application layer for Windows only.

                The only point of using Cygwin was to teach on how Linux's file systemS are different than Windows.

                But Cygwin sees the Windows NTFS filesystem, not a Linux one. There is no Linux, at all, with Cygwin. What the heck did they think that they were showing to you?

                And I barely made a B in the class because the teacher was not good at teaching. He had a difficult time explaining the same thing in different ways so that his students would understand how the principle worked. However, a lab would still have been very valuable for this class, even if the professor hosted it themself.

                Probably not, since he apparently didn't know the subject matter well enough to even know what to have put in the lab!

                Team up with Mike Rowe and create MangoU has an IT Trade school for the different facets of IT. You want to be a programmer? Take this course. You want to go into networking? Go into this program.

                How valuable is that really? The people who need structured courses to learn are most likely going to have a very hard time with a fluid IT environment. I think most people could benefit from an internship long before they would benefit from a structured course.

                Okay, so how about some kind of work/study program? Team the student up with half a day in the field, behind a helpdesk or something and the other half in school. The time they spend in the field pays for the schooling with maybe a little extra for themselves plus a 2nd job to live or something.

                I'm not married to one solution. Just like love, IT will find a way.

                Or, they could get an internship... many of the ones I've seen and the one I participated in was paid. This will give them hands-on production technology use and if they have a decent mentor they will get into a lot of the theory behind why things are the way they are.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • scottalanmillerS
                  scottalanmiller
                  last edited by

                  Has anyone seen a real internship that actually was all that valuable compared to "just go learn it?" I love the idea, but in day to day work how many people do a huge range of interesting things in a way that benefits education? Shadowing IT people at work now and then, yeah, super valuable. But I've known no internship that after a year taught as much as two weeks of just sitting down with a book and a computer and learning some stuff.

                  coliverC dafyreD DashrenderD 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • coliverC
                    coliver @scottalanmiller
                    last edited by

                    @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

                    Has anyone seen a real internship that actually was all that valuable compared to "just go learn it?" I love the idea, but in day to day work how many people do a huge range of interesting things in a way that benefits education? Shadowing IT people at work now and then, yeah, super valuable. But I've known no internship that after a year taught as much as two weeks of just sitting down with a book and a computer and learning some stuff.

                    I had good luck with my internship... but that may be because I was doing the sitting down with a computer and building my own lab in my spare time.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • dafyreD
                      dafyre @scottalanmiller
                      last edited by dafyre

                      @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

                      But I've known no internship that after a year taught as much as two weeks of just sitting down with a book and a computer and learning some stuff.

                      Never had an internship, and I did a lot of learning on my own. But I learned so much more once I was pretty much handed an environment and said "this is yours, now go and improve it, but keep it working."

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • scottalanmillerS
                        scottalanmiller
                        last edited by

                        I wonder how much business training needs to be included? Like "don't confuse technical people with sales people". And of course "you are not special" and "don't get weird."

                        wirestyle22W DashrenderD 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 3
                        • wirestyle22W
                          wirestyle22 @scottalanmiller
                          last edited by

                          @scottalanmiller We're all weird.

                          dafyreD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • dafyreD
                            dafyre @wirestyle22
                            last edited by

                            @wirestyle22 said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

                            @scottalanmiller We're all weird.

                            Yep. Too late for that one.

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • DashrenderD
                              Dashrender @coliver
                              last edited by

                              @coliver said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

                              y weren't as up-to-date with the tech as they thought. It was myself and a few other students who really pushed them to teach

                              Oh man - tell me about it - I found several training classes I took to be completely worthless.

                              scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • DashrenderD
                                Dashrender @scottalanmiller
                                last edited by

                                @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

                                I wonder how much business training needs to be included? Like "don't confuse technical people with sales people". And of course "you are not special" and "don't get weird."

                                This could be actually more important than the IT knowledge in general - so the IT people need to know this And whoever they report to!

                                StrongBadS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • DashrenderD
                                  Dashrender @scottalanmiller
                                  last edited by

                                  @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

                                  Has anyone seen a real internship that actually was all that valuable compared to "just go learn it?" I love the idea, but in day to day work how many people do a huge range of interesting things in a way that benefits education? Shadowing IT people at work now and then, yeah, super valuable. But I've known no internship that after a year taught as much as two weeks of just sitting down with a book and a computer and learning some stuff.

                                  See, you say this, but just a post above you shoot down classroom study. Classroom study can specifically direct students to/through the fundamentals. Granted it might not be a full semester class. it might only be a 2-4 week class, after which you diverge into what your actual specialty will be. As I understand it, that's how doctors work. They graduate from med school, their residency is the real hands on stuff, in many different departments, helping them find the thing that they like.

                                  scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • StrongBadS
                                    StrongBad @Dashrender
                                    last edited by

                                    @Dashrender said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

                                    @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

                                    I wonder how much business training needs to be included? Like "don't confuse technical people with sales people". And of course "you are not special" and "don't get weird."

                                    This could be actually more important than the IT knowledge in general - so the IT people need to know this And whoever they report to!

                                    I suppose this is the stuff he expects you'll get in college. Especially if you do a business or accounting degree?

                                    scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • scottalanmillerS
                                      scottalanmiller @Dashrender
                                      last edited by

                                      @Dashrender said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

                                      @coliver said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

                                      y weren't as up-to-date with the tech as they thought. It was myself and a few other students who really pushed them to teach

                                      Oh man - tell me about it - I found several training classes I took to be completely worthless.

                                      I feel that way about most classes. I miss the old CBTs of ~2000.

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • scottalanmillerS
                                        scottalanmiller @Dashrender
                                        last edited by

                                        @Dashrender said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

                                        @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

                                        Has anyone seen a real internship that actually was all that valuable compared to "just go learn it?" I love the idea, but in day to day work how many people do a huge range of interesting things in a way that benefits education? Shadowing IT people at work now and then, yeah, super valuable. But I've known no internship that after a year taught as much as two weeks of just sitting down with a book and a computer and learning some stuff.

                                        See, you say this, but just a post above you shoot down classroom study. Classroom study can specifically direct students to/through the fundamentals.

                                        You act like one disputes the other. Both are bad. Interns suffer for the reasons, I think, that I mention in the other post. Basically there is no good system for it. Classroom suffers because anything that involves "hand holding" or "spoon feeding" in IT is going to fail in general, it's not a field that will tolerate that long term. You have to be able to self educate or it's game over.

                                        Books and labs, that's where I believe the learning is. Communities like ML provide better mentors than companies do (normally.) And classrooms struggle to be fractionally as useful as a book. Anything you can do in a classroom you can do better on YouTube. Classrooms, at best, are passable. But in practice, in the real world, you have mostly professors who failed to make it in the real world and who are terribly out of date and often totally incorrect (probably why they didn't make it) who take teaching jobs to put food on the table at a fraction of industry pay rates who them teach students who are trying to get away without teaching themselves. So, by and large, you have the failed teaching the lazy. It's a horrible combination. Some professors love what they do and put in a real effort. But very few because teaching is not that rewarding and the pay is bad.

                                        DashrenderD 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • scottalanmillerS
                                          scottalanmiller @StrongBad
                                          last edited by

                                          @StrongBad said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

                                          @Dashrender said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

                                          @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

                                          I wonder how much business training needs to be included? Like "don't confuse technical people with sales people". And of course "you are not special" and "don't get weird."

                                          This could be actually more important than the IT knowledge in general - so the IT people need to know this And whoever they report to!

                                          I suppose this is the stuff he expects you'll get in college. Especially if you do a business or accounting degree?

                                          Yes, exactly. Universities are pretty decent at teaching that broad "soft" stuff.

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • DashrenderD
                                            Dashrender @scottalanmiller
                                            last edited by

                                            @scottalanmiller said in Of What Should Baseline IT Education Consist:

                                            You have to be able to self educate or it's game over.

                                            Isn't this the case in nearly any professional field though? Sure doctors can go to lectures, but they are just as likely to read things and watch video as to attend a lecture or watch someone do it live.

                                            scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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