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What is the most important thing you weren't taught in school?

What topics are missing from the CS/IS education?

Posted so far

  • How to sell an idea

Principles:

  • Often, good enough is better than perfect.
  • Making mistakes is actually a Good Thing™ -- as long as they're new mistakes.
  • If a user can break your code they will.
  • In the Real World™ they're all open-book exams
  • Self confidence is way more important in getting ahead than intelligence.
  • Always prefer simplicity over complexity. The best code is the code that you don't write.
  • You never know when you'll meet someone again ... or where. It's always worthwhile to treat people with respect and kindness.
  • Be aware of what you don't know and don't be afraid to ask questions when you need to

Missing knowledge:

  • How to communicate effectively.
  • Lack of source control
  • Lack of Softskills experience
  • How to productize code
  • How to write secure code
  • How to formulate problems
  • How to self-measurement. To evaluate ones true competences and market worth.
  • How to debug code
  • How important is backup
  • How to read code on a large scale (being able to adapt and build upon existing projects)
  • Good Regular expressions comprehention
  • How to teach others effectively
  • TDD/Unit testing
  • Critical thinking
  • How to integrate different skills and languages in a single project
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CIS and CS teachers take notice! – Will Nov 3 '08 at 17:08
3  
How about teaching people that a degree isn't everything? – Matthew Whited Aug 21 at 13:29
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110 Answers

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Building software is a social activity, more than a technical one.

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I think its a balanced mix of both. – Alexandre Brisebois Oct 16 at 9:58
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Think from the output point of view and not the process how we achieve it.Getting the output is important.

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The most important things that I didn't learn in school couldn't really be taught there anyways.

  1. The people around you, in particular your family, are more important than your work, your ideas, and what you think is your "future". There is no future, only an ever-changing now.

  2. Your work is more important than your salary. By this I mean what work you do, who your boss is, your corporate or non-corporate work environment, co-workers, hours, commute, life-work balance. Salary should be an afterthought - if you are doing work you enjoy, then it is probably fun and challenging and will be paid wat it is worth.

  3. Work determines life outside work. If you are working stressful hours, that will determine what your hours outside work will be like - stressed out, or recovering from stress. if you are working long hours, then your life outside work will be short. If your work is not well-paid .. then your life outside of work will be frugal. But it's better to have lots of stress-free hours outside of work, having fun frugally, than a few stressed-out hours with lots of money.

  4. At your funeral, no one's going to remember or care that you were a great student, whiz programmer, or great worker. They will remember what you were like in your personal interactions, the times you were kind or understanding, and the fun you had together, and hopefully how much you loved them and how much they love you.

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Databases.

My school didn't offer any classes on databases. I think this is the stupidest thing to not include in any Computer Science degree. What are computers without data? What is corporate IT without data?

Every single company / place of work has data and understand how to access it, how it is stored and how to manage it is kind of important.

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They didn't teach me how to use a personal computer in school. They were $10,000 at the time, and way too expensive for student use, so we had a few departmental vaxes that were so overloaded that vi was disabled (we had to use ed instead). It did teach me regular expressions ... even ed was way too slow, so I learned some powerful regular expression search-and-replace methods to save on keystrokes (this way I didn't have to scroll the screen).

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I came out of an IT program with no idea how to structure complicated web applications. Many of the courses were centered around PHP, but I had no MVC knowledge, no best practices for where to store certain types of files (templates, css, images), no idea how to organize files logically. It has come to me over time, but some help would have been nice.

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Self learning.Educate yourself.

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Social Skills

Closely related to communicating effectively are social skills in general. After you graduate, you’re not going to be dealing with your high school or frat buddies anymore.

You’ll be dealing with many people from different backgrounds, countries, and more importantly different age groups, so it would be wise to learn how to socialize outside your own group.

Cut the slang. Learn to respect customs from other countries. Learn how to listen – few people do. Learn when to speak and when NOT to.

Build rapport. Learn the art of networking – that’s key. Networking is a big skill that’s not taught enough in schools. Learn to compliment. Mingle. Make small talk.

Learn to approach people – that’s another big skill. Most people don’t have the guts to take the first initiative and introduce themselves. Be the big man. Take the first step.

I missed all these things. :-(

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Successful are not the one who know better but the one who present better.

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I never had User Interface design/optimization. Usually my form has bunch of (too many) text boxes and combo boxes. I would love to get rid of many of those controls...

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Time management.

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Actually, i have learnt everything about programming all by my self. But if you let me talk about my complete education life, i would be glad if someone let me know how to learn something! if you learn to educate yourself, you can learn anything you want.

We have a saying says that "There is no age to learn"

Since i have studied in Turkey, that may not apply you :)

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How to keep up with the rest of the world would be my answer. For example, when should someone start trying new tools or new versions of things? How do I get into something that I haven't done before in a quick and efficient way? In some ways I'm still working on this answer but it would have been nice if school could have given me a starting point.

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I wasn't taught how thankless a job programming is. Even your fellow programmers often don't know, don't understand, and therefore can't appreciate what you did. So in a comfy corporate programming job, there is no risk-reward. It's an entirely different game showing business value out of all that difficult coding you did.

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I'd like to know the most important thing learned in school, since I never went!

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•How to communicate effectively

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how to ask your boss for a raise.

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It is better to be lucky than good.

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That passing these courses have very little to show how you will perform in the real world.

More important concepts: -being able to work together with other people. (ie dont lock yourself in a room writing code) -memorizing something that is in a book is pretty much useless. (the index is your friend) -if you know what you are doing the language/os being used is close to irrelevant

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No code is better than no code.

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How to program - I learnt it by myself.

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One university professor had something like this in his sig (not from my university, and I was never taught this there):

"If you get 90% correct on my assignment, you pass the course. If you get 90% correct at work, you get sacked."

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How to integrate different skills and languages in a single project.

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Here are the most important wrong things I was taught in high school + college:

  • I was taught that my efforts were mine alone. My successes were mine. My failures were mine. The same applied to others. Being an intelligent island was what was important. Cooperating and networking with others was irrelevant and even potentially detrimental.

  • I was taught that it was ok to be shy and not want to speak in front of others.

  • I was taught that my interpersonal skills were of far less importance than my mental abilities.

  • I was taught that I would be doing interesting and mentally taxing tasks all day.

  • I was taught that being smart and having "potential" would get you into a good school even if your parents didn't have much money. And it would especially be enough to get you a good job that you're able to do, even if you don't yet have the experience.

  • I was taught that proper grammar was important. If you don't know exactly how to avoid sentence fragments and comma errors, you will be looked down on because everyone else knows this and follows it closely.

  • I was taught that higher math was highly valued and that you'd use at least some of it after high school.

  • I was taught that learning the arts adds little value to life since you can't turn it into income.

  • I was taught that the quadratic formula was worth studying for a month or two but compounding interest was only a formula worth memorizing for a few days.

  • I was taught that the most competent person would be in any given position in business. The unqualified would be kept out of a position.

  • I was taught that every smart woman must pursue a BA and a career. What confident self-assured woman could possibly want to be a stay at home mom? At best, it's weak and ambitionless. At worst, it's squandering the gains made by hard-fighting sacrifice-making previous generations.

  • I was taught that a textbook any older than 2 years is obsolete and must be replaced.

  • I was taught that Lotus was the future that I positively must learn if I am to have any competitive edge in business.

  • I was taught that writing lengthy papers was a valuable skill. The more advance courses had longer paper requirements so it only stands to reason that longer = better.

  • I was taught that there were no long term effects to any of my actions. If I failed a class or simply lost interest, I would only take a small hit on my GPA and in many cases, I could take it again without consequence.

  • I was taught that choosing to take Calculus is more important to your life than choosing a "marriage and family" course.

  • I was taught that all projects could be completed in 5 months or less and would never have to be maintained -- by myself or by others.

  • I was taught that school taught the important things. By corollary, the items never even mentioned in school must be trivial: writing a resume, establishing good credit, how to dress and act on an interview, balancing a checkbook, determining the long-term impact of purchasing something on credit, taking initiative in a group, negotiation, diplomacy.

  • When science and religion disagree, if you are in my urban highschool, if you take science's side then you are objectively right and everyone will come to agree with you. And if they don't, their feelings aren't worth considering. Moreover, if you ostracize them, there's no real-world harm that can come back to you if you attack their views. It's not like someone else can affect your island.

  • When science and religion disagree, if you are in my rural university in the southeast, if you take religion's side then you are objectively right and everyone will come to agree with you. And if they don't, their feelings aren't worth considering. Moreover, if you ostracize them, there's no real-world harm that can come back to you if you attack their views. It's not like someone else can affect your island.

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That unlike school and if you played sports, there is no such thing as good sportsmanship. Two people going for the same job, there will be blood. The person sitting in the cube next to you WILL throw you under the bus at review time, and when projects come late your boss will sacrifice you up to their boss in order to save their own arses.

It's nice that we teach little kids that all is fair, and that we can't keep score and that despite the fact that the other team kicked your ass 10-0 you still have to smile and shake their hands and all go get ice cream... Reality is a cruel wakeup call and kids are shown a great injustice by not being prepared to be kicked in the gut now and then.

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salary negotiation

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Be aware of what you don't know and don't be afraid to ask questions when you need to.

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how to sell an idea

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Life is fucking hard.

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The developers (people?) who claim to know the most tend to understand the least.

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