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Hello again.

This is just a question about my future career.

As of current i am a second year student in Computing. Im enjoying the course very much and think its very well balanced.

My question is more towards the future of the course. At the moment im doing the 3 year bachelors degree course with the option of doing an additional year to obtain an honours degree. my course is in ireland.

the differences are quite clear between them the biggest for me being taught c# in 4th year.

but my question is if i had a decent starting job in as a junior programmer and knew i'd be treated well. would doing the extra year really be the right thing too do.

i know there are advantages too doing 4th year and very little cons, but i just cant decide is it better too do the extra year towards education or get one foot in the door of a company.

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I don't see that this is suitable for SO, being mostly about the job market in Ireland and surrounding areas. The question of more education vs. starting on the career early is hardly specific to programming. – David Thornley Oct 27 at 15:05
You think you'd get better payment with that honours degree? – longeasy Oct 27 at 15:07
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Yes, he would get better payment. At least in most of the countries in the world. – Thomasek Oct 27 at 15:10
who better too ask than the programmers who are out there at the moment. i cant ask my lecturers because theyll just tell me their biased opinions. if im in school, they get paid more, if im working, they dont. – OVERTONE Oct 27 at 15:19
If he's good enough for an honours degree, I think that after 1 year, he would get a raise which would match what he would have been making after the one year in school. And he would have one year's less money owed for college loans. – Marcin Oct 27 at 15:24
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closed as not programming related by David Thornley, JohnFx, Austin Salonen, Donut, ammoQ Oct 27 at 15:20

13 Answers

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If you're good enough to be hired by a good company, you'll still be a year later. But once you start working will you want to quit to go back to school?

I advise you strongly to continue.

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Do them both at the same time.

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you mean after i aqquire the bachelors degree? – OVERTONE Oct 27 at 15:18
Yes. Lots of people work and go to school dont they? – d03boy Oct 27 at 15:59
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Many of my computer science courses used Java as the primary language. (But we didn't exclusively use Java.) You know how many times I've used Java in my professional career? Exactly zero. I got far more value out of having experience with languages like C, Prolog, and SML.

If you learn C# now, you may not be using it five years from now. It is far more valuable to have a theoretical understanding of computation that can be applied to learning any new language your job may require.

That said, I would recommend staying on for the fourth year without getting too carried away gaining experience only with C#. By all means, learn it. Just learn some other languages too.

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im jus saying c# would be a plus you know? it isnt the only reason. i like my course. but i like money. thus the dilema. thanks for the honest answer though. – OVERTONE Oct 27 at 15:20
Yeah, I see your point. Another reason to consider the extra year if you can afford it is if graduating with honors equates to a higher starting salary. However, I'm not sure that it's necessarily any better than the extra year of experience you'd get from getting a job sooner. – Brendan Berg Oct 27 at 18:05
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You've got a solid foundation in computing.

What you need now is to get your hands dirty in the real world.

I would lean towards taking the job (Depending on the company, technology used, and salary.)

In 5 years time, no one will care that you have a bachalors or honours.

You're in an industry where you need to constantly learn, so take some c# courses at night, or read some books.

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Something to keep in mind - when there is a recession on its a good time to study, when you are ready to start work you will be more qualified than you would have been, and hopefully the job market will be better (not that the developer market is that bad right now, don't know about Ireland though).

I would advise you to try get a part-time development job somewhere to start tipping the balance from theory to real-world development as you near the end of your studies.

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vote up 0 vote down

Another option is start working as a junior programmer, but ask them to pay for another year of schooling. No reason why you can't do both (and have them pay for it too). They'll receive the benefit as well.

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interesting. right now im working in a deli so its hardly ideal. but i definitely dont see myself getting a junior programmer job after only 2 years inseperate colleges. and java as my primary language – OVERTONE Oct 27 at 15:18
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Right now you are in the student frame of mind and during the time it is easier for you to study. Lets say you do the 3 years and start working in the industry, down the line you see that you want to continue your education further, cause you dont want to always be the programmer etc and want to move on to the higher ladder, then you will definitely need the 4th year + some other master level degree to move up the ladder.. my advice , while you at it .. do the 4th year and in the meantime start a part time job. Also keep in mind once the economy comes out of recession, the job market will open up and chances are people with more education will be preferred. So do the degree while u can.

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I would also advise to continue with your studies while working somewhere for part-time. I made it like this, too.

Once you finish your master degree, you will have enough experience to start as experienced professional, you will not nned to apply for junior positions any more.

And one more thing: Forget that a C# class at the university gives you anything more that you could learn in a company within 1 month. The best way is in my opinion to have a good theoretical background and lot of experience.

Good Luck Tomas

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You can also learn a lot of horrible practices within a month at a company. – d03boy Oct 27 at 16:00
That's right, d03boy! But it belongs to the application procedure to search in internet for some references of this company, ask your colleagues, schoolmates etc. It kind of minimizes your risk. – Thomasek Oct 28 at 8:11
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is if i had a decent starting job in as a junior programmer and knew i'd be treated well. would doing the extra year really be the right thing too do.

That is a pretty big IF, at least to my mind. What I mean is how certain can you be that you would find that job?

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Well, another option would be you could stop at the third year and take another year to do MSc. Better job prospect I believe.

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I'm sure you'll get a wide variety of answers and opinions on this one.

If you feel you're still learning a lot in school then you might prefer to stay for that 4th year. There are a lot of concepts to learn that a good school can teach you as long as you stay focused long enough.

But I wouldn't think that 4th year would make a huge difference on your resume if that's what you're worried about. Real-world experience is usually the highest priority in employers' eyes. As an example, I never earned a degree, but I've been fortunate enough to never go without work since high school simply because of my programming experience.

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A friend of mine took the skipping school route. As a kid (13-14 yo), he used to dial into BBSes (remember those?) in Finland and do random work with some guys developing an open source OS. It turned out he was working on Linux. I always razz him that he could have been working on the OS2 or something like that. He said that the best was when whatever the 28.8k modems came out and his parents stopped hounding him about the phone bills.

Anyway, he ended up skipping college and going straight to working as a consultant making 6 figures per year in San Jose. This dude is one of those genius types who are just on a different planet.

He has no problems getting jobs, but unless he's getting them with someone he's worked with before and knows him, the lack of a degree has cost him some opportunities. For folks that don't know him, he generally has to come in as a contractor for someone on a trial basis, and then gets a perm offer when they get to know his work. And not all employers are willing to do that. So, even for him there are limitations, and he's one of the top-5 smartest guys I've ever known.

All that to say, I'd stay in school if I was you.

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In my opinion the addition year will not help. Any additional classes that does not lead to a Masters is like adding honey to sugar. What you need is real-world work experience which is education in itself. The extra year looks good on paper. However, in practice, it can hurt you because the guy that has the one year real-world experience is considered better; despite you learning C# for a few months in school. Additionally, he/she probably know a little more than you in regards to what is not taught is school but is crucial in the real-world due to the year you gave up.

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