Who should work in these occupations (IT)

Who should work in these occupations (IT)


Hello. I have two educations:

- "Programming in computer systems" (secondary special, graduated from technical school);
- "Information systems and technologies" (higher, graduated from university).

I don’t even want to talk about college, there’s a full bottom. Better about the university. I have already fin isished my studies. But I don’t have a clue what to work with. It has already been 8 months after receiving the diploma, and not a single person from the whole group is working by profession. All are either managers, or call center operators, or taxi drivers, or someone else.

As such, there was no training. There were a lot of tedious and monotonous lectures on databases, on computer networks they stupidly dictated text from a book under a stupid record, from programming - Pascal, Delphi and a little bit C #. By web - html tags and simple css styles. There were two practices. The university generously provided us with practice and we went there. In practice, we were involved in editing some corporate documents and drew any dregs in AutoCad. And that’s it.

Oh yes. There was one subject where we had to study 1C and C #. The teacher said that 1C is garbage, and C # is "not so interesting." And since he read a whole book (!) On Python, we will teach him. The training consisted of a dumb dictation of a book for recording. On the third pair, training was completed. The teacher was old, he either slept, or walked, or included "interesting" (in his opinion) video ...

And so, the study ended, there were two practices, and what to do in this profession and who to work with - we generally have no idea ...

"And so, the study ended, there were two practices, and what to do in this profession and who to work with - we generally have no idea ..."
You had to think about it BEFORE YOU choose a profession. For example, I graduated from a university with a profession in which I never intended to work in my life. I just needed a higher education.

And if you with a diploma "Information Systems and Technologies" do not know who and where to work or how to start gaining experience in the profession - perhaps it is not worth starting. Go manager. As everybody.

In general, the teacher didn’t tell you about 1C in vain, even though they do not consider 1C nicknames for programmers, but in the province there is a lot of work about 1C.
In general, the system administrator will settle down, try to reach C # to the level of a junior and arrange a proger is not fate? Python, by the way, is popular today, you can also learn from the junior.
In general, how would you, during your studies, teach programming to not wait for you to be taught everything, but to search for knowledge yourself, monitor what vacancies are in your city, what are the requirements, and learn the appropriate technologies.

"I have two educations:"

You do not have an education, but a diploma. You got a crust, but the skull is completely empty. From here all difficulties follow. Who will hire you without skills? You have no experience and no skills. If there were at least some skills, then we could try to get some initial position and develop. Yes, the training is bad, but where did you look? Why not developed?

Not sure who to work with? In fact, your specialty allows you to work at all on any PC-related work: web-programmer, mobile application developer, system administrator, 3D designer, etc. It all depends on you.

Well, apparently the problem is not only in the teaching. You were only given the basics of programming, you should have studied everything else yourself, and not complain that you were poorly taught. Python

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