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I've been in an ongoing debate with our IT HR folks about the minimum requirements for mid- and entry-level developer/programmer positions.

I contend that with the right aptitude and attitude, good programmers and engineers can come from a variety of backgrounds, including the "school of hard knocks" route. My HR peeps want to throw away any resume that doesn't have BSCS in the educational background section.

Some of the brightest devs I've worked with have come from eclectic/non-traditional educational backgrounds.

Thoughts?

EDIT Anecdotal example: I can't count the number of times I've had to explain why version control is important to a new grad. If a candidate can prove an intimate familiarity with version control and release management, they're %75 of the way to getting hired.

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Not important in the slightest when it comes down to it, really.

Heck, lots of the best software engineers I've worked with or hired either never finished college or had never taken a computer science class in their life (the physics programs at some universities have tended to produce exceedingly good software engineers in my experience).

Now, I'm a little biased since I'm one of those people that never really took a computer science class, and never finished college... and while I was there, I was a business major.

Now, that being said, some people really do benefit from some computer science programs, and they can be valuable, just as soon as those who have gone through them realize one or both of the following:

  1. They still have a LOT to learn, and knowing how to "program" is a long way off from being a competent software engineer
  2. They're going to need to forget lots of what they just learned

With real entry level people that would be coming to work for you straight from college, it can be pretty tough to weight their resumes since the "education" section will be so prominent compared to the "experience" section, although if you're getting good submissions along with some sort of cover letter or note, or, better yet, answers to some sort of little test or other question(s) instead of JUST their resume, this is made far easier. That should be enough to at least decide which ones to interview, which is where the real decision is made anyway.

To sum up, no, having a degree is really in no way any kind of accurate measure of how "good" somebody will be, skill-wise, and I can guarantee you that if you throw out any resumes that don't have a degree listed, you're going to pass up some real gems.

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No need for me to write a comment now. Thanks for taking away an opportunity to up my rep. – MusiGenesis Sep 22 '08 at 19:08
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vote up 14 vote down

Your HR people are in HR, not tech. They have a pre-conceived notion of how to view the world, and it's an outdated one. Whether you can change that attitude or not is another question.

I honestly have no idea what the majors were of most of my colleagues. I majored in Asian Languages, for all that's worth. Several of my colleagues have no college degrees at all, and are entirely self-educated in coding. It makes no difference in their ability, as aptitude is king.

I'd rather take an uneducated kid who taught himself C at age 12 so he could build computer games, then a CS major who's a "9 to 5 programmer", any day of the week. (sorry for the run-on sentence!)

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vote up 8 vote down

It is definitely not required, and if imposed as a filter may eliminate some of the best choices you have.

OTOH if you are swamped with resumes for a junior position then you need some kind of filtering and it is a better bet than just choosing names starting before M. The more senior to position the less relevant the degree becomes since the candidate should have the experience to prove they are qualified for the post.

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vote up 8 vote down

I think this is one of those questions for which you really have to come to an answer yourself. Posed in a forum like this, you'll invariably get a deluge of responses like "I didn't finish school, and I do just fine" and "lots of really smart people I work with don't have degrees". Such people carry strong feelings about the matter (which doesn't make sense, really), and will likely dominate the responses. People who earned degrees and currently work in fields related to their degrees are more apt to shrug and say "It might be important, but it depends", or not answer at all.

But all of that is irrelevant, because none of these people work for you or have your experiences or have to make your decisions. Just remember what a B.S. degree is: a general base of knowledge and scholarly aptitude with some non-negligible portion of specialized knowledge that is difficult to obtain. BSCS students, the good ones, will pick up a lot of the same skillset as a "self-taught" programmer will do; both out of necessity. Technical skills in particular technologies isn't what a degree provides (not good degrees, anyway). What you need to evaluate is if you need particular technical skills (probably) and whether you need people with certain bases of knowledge that are difficult to obtain outside the structured environment of formal instruction.

All that rambling is really just to say: just be cognizant of what a degree really is, and then decide if your business needs people with that kind of training.

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vote up 4 vote down

Less than a practical test. Most people that come out of college haven't written a line of code outside of class and don't know jack about coding in real life.

At least, that's the way it was for me.

Most of my current skillset I learned by reading and trying and failing and trying again. They don't teach that in college. Its a damn pity.

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It is important if you are running a consulting company that has to send people out on jobs. It is also important if you are getting into areas that require a background knowledge in the areas covered in a CS degree- algorithm analysis, artificial intelligence, compilers, etc. It is vastly more important to know that these people can write code in a professional manner- which no degree truly indicates. How to figure that out is much more difficult, but hopefully you are using at least a simple programming test.

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vote up 3 vote down

I think your HR people are idiots. By their reasoning they wouldn't have employed Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, or John Carmack (though I guess Jobs wasn't really a programmer).

In my experience there's almost no correlation between the aptitude of a developer and whether they hold an undergraduate degree. This does change with post-grad degrees if you're looking for a candidate with experience in a certain area.

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Quick answer: A BSCS is not a good measure at all, your HR folks are nuts.

Longer answer:

What are you doing, and what are you looking for? The CS part may even be a negative depending on what you're looking for. CS contains lots of theory and low-level OS type stuff. I'd expect a CS to be able to discuss the finer points of thread-queueing, but he may be completely useless when it comes to realistic database design supporting millions of rows of data. Of course, if you're looking to hire someone to help write Windows 7 then the thread queueing is more important than the database. The BS too may not be all that useful. The school of hard knocks, as you mentioned, can be a very good educator.

Having said all that, there needs to be some sort of filter, and most HR people can't use technical questions as a good barometer since they don't get the answers. So they use education as it's something they can grasp.

More importantly, what's the job description for the position? Did you write it? Did it mention BSCS as a requirement? If so, why did you include that requirement. If not, why is HR using a requirement that not in the job description? And if you didn't write a job description then how can you be upset w/HR? :-)

-Walden

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I'm a C developer at a company making firewalls, network audit stuff, etc. and my education isn't complete. Half the employees are waiting for their diplomas, and nobody has any trouble. So it might be good, but it's not an excluding factor. It helps to have someone on the interviews who's technically adept enough to see if an applicant is a hack with a diploma or someone talented without one.

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In all honesty, depending on where you are obviously, it's not. I would say some fields of programming would require it, but for the day to day stuff at most companies it's not really important. If someone is smart enough to get through the interview process and doesn't have one, it shouldn't make a difference. Two of the smartest people I worked with don't have degrees in CS and I would hire them any day over anyone I've worked with who has a degree in CS.

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Some of the best developer I know have a very different background. Even worse, relatively few of the really good developers I know have a BSCS :-(

But then HR need something to go on and unless you can afford to invite anyone and have them do a real test it is pretty much only thing you can use as a first selection.

But you want really good people look for the self thought people who came out of the army or studied something like music and test their aptitude and problem solving skills.

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I would say that example code and projects would be more beneficial than a BSCS. I'm currently working towards mine, and I know that I've learned far more on my own than I have in the classroom. Essentially, I've only learned terms to go with things I'd already discovered myself, if I hadn't read about them previously. I also know plenty of students who are practically inept yet still seem to be making it through classes.

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What is important (and this depends on the circumstances, assuming a developer role):

1) Experience (especially that which is relevant)

2) Educational background (especially good universities) although the course itself isn't a big factor

3) General attitude, past work history, lack of gaps in work history, grammar

The lack of a random qualification (e.g., Sun Certified Java Programmer) shouldn't be a problem to getting an interview. At the interview you can analyse the person's analytical and problem solving skills, and get a feel for how he would integrate with the team.

Not having a degree would be a major issue, but having a degree from a good university, but in a non CS field shouldn't be a problem if they've done work since that's relevant (e.g., physicists and engineers do programming as well, maths surely isn't a barrier, etc!)

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I think a CS degree is worth a lot. It exposes you to a lot of ideas about programming that 'school of hard knocks' types often dismiss, and are less useful because of it.

For example, even if you never use Scheme in your work, you might apply a functional style in some part of your code in procedural language, where it fits, and have better code as a result.

I've known people who pride themselves on industry experience, who dismiss essential things like test-driven design, as academic fripperies.

Personally, I'd like to work with the kind of people who have seen through three years of university. That's just me, and of course there are exceptions.

Of course there are people who become great developers without a degree. I think it would be more difficult for an HR department to identify them. They should probably have some sort of points system, rather than a blanket " !degree && resume.dispose()"

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Google has sort of spearheaded the resurgence in demand for CS degrees. The demand has also moved into the zillions of "Web 2.0" companies that have appeared over the past several years. This debate has raged on numerous websites over the past 15 years and raged on BBSes and Usenet prior to that.

There is no easy answer to your question. The questions you have to ask are, does my company foster a culture where a formal education is valuable? Does the company want people with advanced degrees, or the capability to earn advanced degrees? Will we provide salary equality for degreed and non-degreed professionals?

Your anecdotal experience has value, and I'm sure some of the best programmers you've worked with came from non-CS backgrounds or had no degree at all. But on the other side, some of the best programmers have come from CS backgrounds. There's no real litmus test that says one is better than the other overall. It just depends on your company and its culture.

If I founded a company that focused on biotechnology, I would want my people to have degrees, preferably Ph.D.s. Why? Because I would know that they had substantial experience performing research and dealing with academic topics. If I founded a company that enabled microblogging, I would probably not care about degrees--just as long as the people could code and understood the stuff that we talk about here on Stack Overflow. Jeff Atwood does not have a degree. Joel Spolsky does. And yet, here we are.

(In the interest of disclosure, I don't have a degree. I studied philosophy for two semesters back in 1993.)

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It's a very minimal certification and little else. Given two candidates with similar backgrounds, I'd lean toward the one with a BSCS. For a programming position, though, I'd take a self-taught programmer with lots of Open Source experience over a newly graduated CompSci major any day of the week.

Having said that, the BSCS does mean that you can at least expect them to know basic theory. I'd much rather discuss database design with someone who knows what "normalization" means than someone who learned about databases from knocking out a home page in PHP. A self-taught programmer may very well have the same theoretical knowledge, but you need to explore that in the interview.

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I think it's important to remember that "no degree" doesn't necessarily mean "no formal education in programming". There are no doubt countless people who studied computer science or engineering at a university but never graduated (think: lack of funds, family crisis, etc).

If you require a degree you'll be missing out on all those folks and some of them could be very talented.

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Your attitude is very similar to my manager, who was the one who hired me for my current position. I think it is a good attitude to have, but I may be biased because it got me a job. However your edit about version control software doesn't seem to reflect your general attitude. I actually never used SVN until my last semester before I obtained my BSCS. I instantly recognized how awesome it was, and how much time and headache it would saved me had I started using it earlier, but figuring out how to use TortoiseSVN took me all of an hour. SVN command line takes alittle bit longer, but the general idea is not a hard one. So why would you hold it against a interviewee if she had never worked with version control before, when it would take at most a week to get up to speed with the ins and outs of version control.

I can see your point of view, but if I interpreting you right, you are looking for people who are willing to learn, so it seems inconstant to hold lack of working software engineering experience against someone who just came from an academic background, especially when they are simple concepts that be overcome quickly if your candidate has the right attitude. Essentially I think it works both ways, I feel you are right in accepting someone without a CS background if you willing to overlook certain areas, I think you should also be willing to accept with a CS background who will most likely have more academic experience then 'real' experience.

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For mid-level, I wouldn't think the degree would matter much at all since they already have real world experience.

For entry level, the question is much tougher. I totally agree with your point that a good programmer can come from just about any background, but they need to have shown some sort of prior experience with programming before you hire them.

Most engineering and math majors will have had some sort of programming experience in school, and it's fairly common for people with those degrees to hop right into development jobs. And I think it's certainly a disservice to your company to not consider those candidates. My degree is in Mechanical Engineering, and I've had a successful 14 year software development career since then.

For someone with a degree like history or English it's much harder for them to show any sort of significant programming experience.

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It's only one aspect of the mix, and it only indicates that (A) they were persistent enough to finish college and (B) the subject was either their first choice or least unpleasant one. But it's not a very good filter criterion, in my experience. If you use it that way, you'll miss out on hiring some of the best in the industry.

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It all comes down to how much time you're willing to spend on interviews. Adding filters to your resume stack decreases the amount of time you'll spend and hopefully improves the quality of candidates you'll interview. Of course, any filter has the potential to screen out a worthy candidate.

So: if interviewing every last applicant is worth it to you so that you don't miss that "diamond in the rough", go for it. Honestly, I think it will be difficult to convince upper management that the time spent is worth it.

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I don't have a traditional CS degree, and I got hired on at a very large company for my interview skills and ability to learn new things.

In my opinion, I think CS graduates are more prepared than non-CS grads, but not enough to warrant excluding non-CS grads. In my personal experience I've learned more in my first month of employment than I ever did in school.

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The place that I work at considered two years real work experience was equivalent to one year of college. From my personal experience I believe the reverse is true.

To me, what is more important is what did you do while earning that degree and how have you applied your knowledge. It the end it boils down to the interviewer having good phone and face to face interviewing skills to learn what the potential employee knows and not how much college a programmer has.

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IMO, a degree means nothing unless you consider (1) the university it came from, (2) the transcript of the person, and (3) the person in an interview. I wouldn't accept or dismiss anyone based on a degree of lack thereof.

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I think it really just depends on how many people you want to interview, and how in depth your interview process is going to be. While a BSCS isn't everything, accepting only people with a CS degree probably does eliminate a lot of "noise" from your applicant pool. Maybe only 50% of the people you interview with a BSCS will be any good, but I'd bet that number would be less for people with either a different background or no degree at all.

I know a lot of people who when I say that I'm a "programmer" say, "Oh yeah? I do programming too - have you heard of Microsoft Access?" Unless your an Access dev shop, that person is probably not the right choice.

A well designed interview process (programming questions, team interview, whatever else fits) will likely screen out the candidates who wouldn't work regardless of if they have a degree or not. But, I think your HR department is just trying to save you from having to interview tons and tons of unqualified candidates. There's nothing worse than taking time out of your day to sit down to an interview with someone who 2 minutes in your realize doesn't fit the bill at all and must have lied on their resume about knowing C#. At least it's a lot harder to lie on a resume about getting a particular degree from a University....

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Often HR feels compelled to screen applicants for the manager. If you were to filter your own applications this may not be required. They may be receiving 100s of applications for one position. They are looking for any filter to reduce the number of applications to be looked at. I see this requirement often in postings where I live which keeps me from looking around even though I have 10 years experience and an AS in computer science.

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Not important if you want to be programmer, anyone can learn online how to program. If you want to be a Software Engineer though, you most definitively need one.

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I've worked with people who are excellent programmers but don't have a degree and people who do have a degree but just don't get it. Many good developers I've worked with have degrees but not in CS (e.g. Physics, Chemistry or Engineering). So a CS degree by itself proves nothing. You also have to bear in mind that all degrees are not equal. A 2:2 from a below-average institution is not the same as a first-class degree from a top-rated CS department.

If you have to choose between 2 people of the same age, one who has got a CS degree and one who instead spent those years working as a programmer, the one with real world experience is almost certainly going to be more immediately useful to you. And once you get to dealing with people with 5+ years of real world experience, what they did or didn't do at university is largely irrelevant.

However, while they may well have more in-depth practical skills (such as the version control that you cite), self-taught programmers are less likely to have been exposed to as broad a curriculum as somebody who has a good degree. Elements of CS theory (such as computational complexity and compiler techniques), mathematics, and exposure to alternative programming paradigms are areas that may be blind spots.

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Experience trumps degrees in my opinion. Bill Gates, Albert Einstein and Thomas Edison were all dropouts.

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It is not of the slightest importance. One of the better programmers I had working for me had a HND (British vocational equivalent of a degree) in business studies and had come up through the secretarial route.

The key thing to remember about people who come into CS from other careers, is that these people wanted this job enough to start again at the bottom, which is a highly desirable character trait. They didn't just walk into software engineering because "that's the next thing to do".

In case you were wondering, my career history goes

BSc electronics
systems engineer
firmware engineer
team leader
s/w development manager
salesman
senior software engineer
principal software engineer
consultant

I've had a couple of wrong turn myself, so I'm certainly not going to object to anyone else changing careers :-)

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