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Self taught or by the book: Who generally is a better programmer?   [Edit]

Survey period: 31 Mar 2008 to 7 Apr 2008

A self-taught programmer may say they have more insight by solving problems the hard way, while a formally trained dev may counter that there's the hard way and there's the correct way. What's your call?

OptionVotes% 
Self taught programmers generally make better developers38416.52
Formally taught programmers generally make better developers1596.84
A self taught programmer with an equal amount of formal training makes the best programmer1,14749.33
It depends / I don't know / It's not black and white63527.31



 
GeneralRe: Formal training and enough self-motivation to teach oneself something... Pin
Vasudevan Deepak Kumar31-Mar-08 1:27
Vasudevan Deepak Kumar31-Mar-08 1:27 
GeneralRe: Formal training and enough self-motivation to teach oneself something... Pin
devenv.exe31-Mar-08 3:00
professionaldevenv.exe31-Mar-08 3:00 
GeneralRe: Formal training and enough self-motivation to teach oneself something... Pin
Cyrilix30-Mar-08 22:20
Cyrilix30-Mar-08 22:20 
GeneralRe: Formal training and enough self-motivation to teach oneself something... Pin
HuntrCkr30-Mar-08 20:03
HuntrCkr30-Mar-08 20:03 
GeneralRe: Formal training and enough self-motivation to teach oneself something... Pin
Cyrilix30-Mar-08 22:21
Cyrilix30-Mar-08 22:21 
GeneralRe: Formal training and enough self-motivation to teach oneself something... Pin
Member 9630-Mar-08 20:13
Member 9630-Mar-08 20:13 
GeneralRe: Formal training and enough self-motivation to teach oneself something... Pin
Cyrilix30-Mar-08 22:17
Cyrilix30-Mar-08 22:17 
GeneralRe: Formal training and enough self-motivation to teach oneself something... Pin
Member 9631-Mar-08 7:54
Member 9631-Mar-08 7:54 
If a person needs formal training to get motivation or learn where to look then they shouldn't be in the field in the first place and should choose something else that interests them enough to learn all about it on their own.


Cyrilix wrote:
Why would that be an issue?


Time *and* money. Going the university route you spend years and a lot of money to get to the point where you're barely employable in the real world and have outdated skills and opinions molded into you by professors that generally are riding some hobby horse and don't really give a crap about real world employment and conditions.

Self learning and apprenticing actually pays you, you're ideally suited for a well paying job a few years into it and you're not left with a crushing debt and skills and knowledge that are years out of date.

This is an argument that will rage on forever with no one on either side giving in so it's a bit pointless to debate it but I think it's important for potential university students to have a big think about it. Ideally *not* go directly to university or college from high school but rather take a couple of years to get seasoned in the real world before they make that decision. If they don't they end up being in their 20's or even 30's but really being children still in all the most important areas of life.


"The pursuit of excellence is less profitable than the pursuit of bigness, but it can be more satisfying."
- David Ogilvy

GeneralRe: Formal training and enough self-motivation to teach oneself something... Pin
bwilhite31-Mar-08 1:40
bwilhite31-Mar-08 1:40 
GeneralRe: Formal training and enough self-motivation to teach oneself something... Pin
G7TNZ31-Mar-08 2:36
G7TNZ31-Mar-08 2:36 
GeneralRe: Formal training and enough self-motivation to teach oneself something... Pin
SimonRigby31-Mar-08 3:07
SimonRigby31-Mar-08 3:07 

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