The question arose again in my head after a recent call with some university mate who stayed there after graduation while I left for the practice field.
Since I have two (technically even three) degrees from two universities from two different countries, I think I'm in the position of making a statement. I believe that the time in a university does not necessarily help a person to develop his skills and grow into a qualified and valuable professional in the IT field, no matter whether it's pratical software engineering or theoretical computer science. I also believe that many places are able to destroy a promising personality.
I have attended to many courses where the professor had no vision and could not really expalin why and where what he was doing could be useful. He also happened to ingore and get offended when intelligent students were indicating shortcomings of some concepts. Many lectures were basically at or below the Wikipedia level of expertise. I almost felt sorry for the person who in his probably 40s was doing useless staff, publishing papers, wasting state money and people's time. How can you honestly accept the words and have respect for the person who hasn't practically created anything and hasn't worked a day in his life? Of course I'm talking about comparing him with the other bright people of the staff who have knowledge, experience, understanding and vision of the matter at hand.
I wouldn't really care about it if I hadn't seen some potentially promising students had their minds poisoned. Instead of applying their talents to achieve something and make changes in the IT they end up sitting at the chair buried in that wothless same stuff, publishing papers and doing similar stuff just because they got used to these things and university life. I have also seen students starting (and failing) some abstract projects having wasted huge budget money and not feeling a bit guilty about that.
Especially in the second case which happens to be one of top and the most respected intitutions in Germany, I saw one of the main teaching points is participation in internal political games and excercise of the art of ass-kissing. No matter how good you are, if you want to succeed with your grades you only had to master those skills. Some students haven't learned anything beyond that.
I personally would pay special attention before hiring a guy who spent several years at the uni after graduation doing PhD or working in the staff. It's not necessarily bad but it's a clear sign that extra check has to be done on the guy. What if he will not be contributing to the project but only be distributing abstract ideas without thinking of the budget, applicability, time, resources and other related questions?
What's your experience? Has the university really given you the knowledge and the understanding of the universe? Or it was just a waste of your time?
To admins: Please let my question be answered. It is no less programming-related than the question about jokes and tattoos. I'm sure many will have stories to tell.
