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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
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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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vote up 10 vote down

How to teach others effectively.

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vote up 22 vote down

How to resolve a technical disagreement.

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vote up 121 vote down

We weren't taught about source control. Luckily, I had a good mentor who taught me before I finished school and embarrassed myself.

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Actually, that's a good way to detect cheating. If the student has to do their assignments using source control, you can look at the list of changes, and stop people from just copying assignments of others. You could still pay someone to do your work, but it's a little harder to game the system. – Kibbee Nov 3 '08 at 14:08
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We were taught to use source control but they told us to Use RCS... – Omar Kooheji Nov 3 '08 at 15:25
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Source control? You had SOURCE CONTROL? We had rubber bands for the card deck and an pencil to number them with, and we were happy to have them! Geez... – Ken Gentle Nov 3 '08 at 21:13
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@Taylor: Java isn't insanely hard to figure out either, but a lot of schools are teaching it. Version control should be taught and used at universities, IMHO. – Bill the Lizard Nov 4 '08 at 18:52
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vote up 10 vote down

Paul Graham summed this up well, I think: What You'll Wish You'd Known

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You never know when you'll meet someone again ... or where. It's always worthwhile to treat people with respect and kindness.

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vote up 96 vote down

Often, good enough is better than perfect.

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I prefer the step above "good enough" but a few steps below "perfect" myself, but yes, you do need to know when to stop "perfecting" component X. – Thomas Owens Nov 3 '08 at 13:19
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"too often, 'perfect' gets in the way of 'good enough'" – warren Nov 3 '08 at 13:28
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I heard it as "the perfect is the enemy of the good." Close enough! – Walter Mitty Nov 3 '08 at 16:20
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"If a thing is worth doing it is worth doing badly" as my old man used to say! – Aidan Nov 19 '08 at 11:57
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I hate to admit that this is true, I like perfect better :( – the_drow Aug 31 at 8:18
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vote up 18 vote down

You can't help learning when you teach. And explaining something to others is an excellent way to find out exactly how well you know it.

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Or... how much more you can learn about it – Brad Bruce Nov 19 '08 at 16:15
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Don't discard your mistakes -- they may be more valuable than your successes, even if only as bad examples ... or SO questions!

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What people think you're capable of accomplishing is a good indicator of your success.

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The most important thing I've learn is that knowledge need to be up-to-date in software and that I'll need to learn for the rest of my life :)

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Whether you think you can, or think you can't, you are right.

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vote up 28 vote down

That the real world is unfair.

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I think they generally stack those lessons under the 'Philosophy' label ;) – tloach Nov 3 '08 at 13:54
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Heard from a friend: "You'll never get what you deserve, but what you are able to negotiate" (And he said he was told that at school) – Null303 Nov 3 '08 at 18:01
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That is a really great point. And to illustrate it, I will vote you down. – TrickyNixon Nov 3 '08 at 18:28
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Every time I get my grades I´m taught this one. – Seiti Nov 3 '08 at 18:32
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vote up 14 vote down

Choose your employers wisely.

Bad employers = bad references, which can follow you around forever.

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And then you can sue them for blacklisting you. :) – Sam Schutte Nov 3 '08 at 18:13
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vote up 77 vote down

It is ok to be wrong, it is ok to make a mistake, it is ok to say "I don't know"

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I love deadlines. I like the whooshing sound they make as they fly by. - Douglas Adams – Rorschach Nov 3 '08 at 20:15
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But it is not OK to make the same mistake over and over again. – sneg Nov 3 '08 at 20:28
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That is actually one of my confidence tests. If someone can admit when they don't know then I don't have to worry as much about them guessing at the "right" answer. – Oorang Jun 11 at 6:52
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vote up 5 vote down

Just how important being able to effectively communicate really is.

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vote up 31 vote down

How to communicate effectively.

Getting people to understand you and taking the effort to understand others is critical in all endeavors.

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vote up 51 vote down

TDD/Unit testing.

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You'll be working with real people. Correct code and command-line switches ain't good enough in the real world.

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The skills to keep on learning.

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vote up 48 vote down

Critical thinking.

I wish more kids were taught how to analyze a problem, how to avoid fallacious thinking etc. etc. I can't tell you how many times I've got caught in the error of "all or nothing" thinking--for example, if we can't fix all the problems with some software we shouldn't bother to fix any of them. I'm sure there is a name for that logical fallacy--I'm sure some bright commenter will tell me what it is. :-) My point is that learning to think critically is a skill that serves any developer well and it isn't taught in any schools that I know of.

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This might be what you mean (via Google): BIFURCATION: (either-or, black or white, all or nothing fallacy) assumes that two categories are mutually exclusive and exhaustive, that is, something is either a member of one or the other, but not both or some third category. tinyurl.com/SO-fallacy – AgentConundrum Nov 3 '08 at 20:53
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Similar concept is the "Sucker's Choice": I can either keep quiet about an issue that's really a problem or tell the truth and lose my best friend. We tend not to think, "How can I resolve the problem AND keep my friend? – kajaco Dec 23 '08 at 16:24
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vote up 38 vote down

How to teach yourself.

Often in the real world you will not have the tools/skills/expereince to resolve a problem, that is one thing that the human brain can do that machine's cant. It can figure it out.

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Surely the whole point of going to university is learnign to teach yourself. Thats one of the main things I learned... – Omar Kooheji Nov 3 '08 at 15:27
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@Omar: I agree, my university had a lot of "go figure it out on your own" type of things, in addition to the straightforward instruction. – TM Nov 4 '08 at 5:39
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School education seemed to encourage doing everything exactly like the teacher said, and I saw little benefit in just producing carbon copies. I was not fortunate enough to attend university, and guess you are right about university, just wish they did that since I was 5 – Rihan Meij Nov 4 '08 at 11:57
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vote up 24 vote down

Making mistakes is actually a Good Thing™ -- as long as they're new mistakes.

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We weren't taught that the consequences of poor quality go far beyond a bad grade!

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There's actually no good reason why this couldn't be taught. Give students an chunk of ugly code and ask them to a: Explain what its purpose is, b: explain what its side effects are, and c: refactor it. – T.E.D. Nov 19 '08 at 14:38
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vote up 17 vote down

The link between technology and business. i.e. Technology is driven by the business requirements.

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I love this. I told a blackberry guy at a trade show that they should add an mp3 player. He maintained that they would never. Two years later. tada! What people want tech will prvide :) – baash05 Nov 4 '08 at 3:11
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That most things you learn will be obsolete in 5 years. I haven't programmed in FORTRAN using a deck of punch cards since I left college.

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I'd hope that a "good" CS curriculum would teach core concepts and techniques that transcend time, platform, and language. As an EE who writes software/firmware to make the hardware work--unattended for 10+ years--my philosophy is that programming is essentially the same task regardless of implementation specifics. Sure. there are plenty of differences (OO? Procedural? State machine? Client-server?), but all of the vital, eternal concepts of architecture, supportability, extensibility, efficiency, etc.apply regardless. Everything else is a question how how to talk to the compiler. :-) – Adam Liss Jun 21 at 2:16
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vote up 15 vote down

How to ask my own questions. Too often in university, you're simply asked to answer a canned question. Sometimes the key to succeeding at something is knowing what questions to ask.

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vote up 2 vote down

Requirements gathering. If you show up at your first day of work expecting to be handed a program description that a TA could grade you on how well you followed, you're going to be in for a surprise. I know I was.

"Well, how do you want it to work? What do you mean 'I don't know'?!?"

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vote up 13 vote down

Marketing and sales. Not in the selling-sugar-water-to-tourists sense, but in the ability to effectively 'sell' your ideas to your peer, managers, and customers.

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All the nuances and issues that arise between 100% academically correct and 100% employer correct:

100% academically correct will get you a good grade. 100% employer correct will get you a good paycheck.

How to cover your ass when instructed by time constraints to do something that is not 100% academically correct.

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vote up 0 vote down

Until you've been in the business for at least 10 years you really don't know anything.

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This is very, very untrue. Experience is gained by active learning, it is not a counter that just ticks away as time goes by. And there are many, many great developers out there who have much less than 10 years of experience in the business. – Wedge Nov 4 '08 at 2:05
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