hiring practices
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Can you even get a Bachelors in Web Development? If I saw that, I would think something's fishy.
- S 50 cups of coffee and you know it's on!
ha ha :-D
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if you were hiring for a position title "web application something-or-another" would your interest be more piqued by a degree titled: Bachelors in Web Development or Bachelors in Computer Science I'm not asking if you would have them code something. I really just want to know which title sounds more "appealing" per se. In other words, all else being equal. :-D
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I would be more generic: Bachelor's in Excellence
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Can you even get a Bachelors in Web Development? If I saw that, I would think something's fishy.
- S 50 cups of coffee and you know it's on!
That's what I was thinking. Is there enough in there for a whole degree course? (Mind you, I'm coming from the point of view of a Scottish 4-year degree. Other countries tend to do shorter degrees)
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I would be more generic: Bachelor's in Excellence
Bachelors in Pwning ;P
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if you were hiring for a position title "web application something-or-another" would your interest be more piqued by a degree titled: Bachelors in Web Development or Bachelors in Computer Science I'm not asking if you would have them code something. I really just want to know which title sounds more "appealing" per se. In other words, all else being equal. :-D
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I'd be wondering if the B in Web Development was some kind of crap degree come up with by one of those lame universities or polytechs that seem to have a degree for everything and no one knows what anyone actually learns in that degree. I'd have to go by University reputation and maybe look at what was in the degree. Most courses I see that are to do with the web are to do with design and web pages, not web applications, so I wouldn't be sure what the degree actually taught. So I'd go with CS degree because at least I probably know what that means.:~
"Your typical day is full of moments where you ask for a cup of coffee and someone hands you a bag of nails." - Scott Adams
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if you were hiring for a position title "web application something-or-another" would your interest be more piqued by a degree titled: Bachelors in Web Development or Bachelors in Computer Science I'm not asking if you would have them code something. I really just want to know which title sounds more "appealing" per se. In other words, all else being equal. :-D
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jgasm wrote:
Bachelors in Web Development
Sounds so, hmm -- like I just bought my degree from one of those shady online places. Or ITT Tech* * Warning credits will not transfer.
-Sean ---- Тихая революция
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if you were hiring for a position title "web application something-or-another" would your interest be more piqued by a degree titled: Bachelors in Web Development or Bachelors in Computer Science I'm not asking if you would have them code something. I really just want to know which title sounds more "appealing" per se. In other words, all else being equal. :-D
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Neither. Nothing about web development is challenging enough to justify a degree of any kind; maybe a certificate at most. On the other hand, BSCS is a degree that is far removed from application development. CS students are focused on computing theory, data structures, algorithm design and that ilk. If I was hiring for such a post, I'd be looking for a guy or gal with a keen interest, lots of self-study, and a portfolio of web designs I can peruse online. Or one could hire our Accounts Receivable lady who fancies herself a web designer. She's building our company website in PowerPoint, for bogs sake, and the boss is snowed. I ain't saying a word...:sigh:
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
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if you were hiring for a position title "web application something-or-another" would your interest be more piqued by a degree titled: Bachelors in Web Development or Bachelors in Computer Science I'm not asking if you would have them code something. I really just want to know which title sounds more "appealing" per se. In other words, all else being equal. :-D
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The former would pique my interest, if only to question the content of the degree course. Is there enough of an established body of knowledge concerning web development to adequately constitute a degree course?
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Neither. Nothing about web development is challenging enough to justify a degree of any kind; maybe a certificate at most. On the other hand, BSCS is a degree that is far removed from application development. CS students are focused on computing theory, data structures, algorithm design and that ilk. If I was hiring for such a post, I'd be looking for a guy or gal with a keen interest, lots of self-study, and a portfolio of web designs I can peruse online. Or one could hire our Accounts Receivable lady who fancies herself a web designer. She's building our company website in PowerPoint, for bogs sake, and the boss is snowed. I ain't saying a word...:sigh:
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
Roger Wright wrote:
Nothing about web development is challenging enough to justify a degree of any kind
im sure all the web developers in the world love being told how simple minded their work is.
Roger Wright wrote:
and a portfolio of web designs I can peruse online
not interested in design. interested in application development.
Roger Wright wrote:
Or one could hire our Accounts Receivable lady who fancies herself a web designer.
not interested in design. interested in application development.
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Neither. Nothing about web development is challenging enough to justify a degree of any kind; maybe a certificate at most. On the other hand, BSCS is a degree that is far removed from application development. CS students are focused on computing theory, data structures, algorithm design and that ilk. If I was hiring for such a post, I'd be looking for a guy or gal with a keen interest, lots of self-study, and a portfolio of web designs I can peruse online. Or one could hire our Accounts Receivable lady who fancies herself a web designer. She's building our company website in PowerPoint, for bogs sake, and the boss is snowed. I ain't saying a word...:sigh:
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
Roger Wright wrote:
Nothing about web development is challenging enough to justify a degree of any kind; maybe a certificate at most.
Are you assuming that web development == static HTML pages, or just trying to stir controversy ?
Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++ "I am working on a project that will convert a FORTRAN code to corresponding C++ code.I am not aware of FORTRAN syntax" ( spotted in the C++/CLI forum )
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Roger Wright wrote:
Nothing about web development is challenging enough to justify a degree of any kind
im sure all the web developers in the world love being told how simple minded their work is.
Roger Wright wrote:
and a portfolio of web designs I can peruse online
not interested in design. interested in application development.
Roger Wright wrote:
Or one could hire our Accounts Receivable lady who fancies herself a web designer.
not interested in design. interested in application development.
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I don't mean to imply that web development is trivial, but it's not the stuff degrees are made for. I wouldn't consider hiring someone with a degree in computer programming, either, and I believe that, in general, programming is far more challenging than most web app development. Both are primarily creative tasks, with less science than art required. Both are credentialed by performance and passion, not papers from a school.
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
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I don't mean to imply that web development is trivial, but it's not the stuff degrees are made for. I wouldn't consider hiring someone with a degree in computer programming, either, and I believe that, in general, programming is far more challenging than most web app development. Both are primarily creative tasks, with less science than art required. Both are credentialed by performance and passion, not papers from a school.
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
Roger Wright wrote:
Both are primarily creative tasks, with less science than art required. Both are credentialed by performance and passion, not papers from a school.
i would disagree and say that i would prefer a college graduate with a degree in anything because they will have more experience in organizational communication (esp. if they did more than just course work) a degree represents follow through and the ability to handle multi tasking while under stress with multiple deadlines
Roger Wright wrote:
but it's not the stuff degrees are made for
what are degrees made for?
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Can you even get a Bachelors in Web Development? If I saw that, I would think something's fishy.
- S 50 cups of coffee and you know it's on!
Steve Echols wrote:
Can you even get a Bachelors in Web Development?
I've never heard of a Bachelors in Web Development (I too would think somethings fishy with that as well) but I do know that Bachelors in Computer Science exists as I have one :laugh: < shameless plug > * But I also have many years of "self-taught* experience as well along with *trial-and-error* learning :-D
"Well yes, it is an Integer, but it's a metrosexual Integer. For all we know, under all that hair gel it could be a Boolean." Tom Welch
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if you were hiring for a position title "web application something-or-another" would your interest be more piqued by a degree titled: Bachelors in Web Development or Bachelors in Computer Science I'm not asking if you would have them code something. I really just want to know which title sounds more "appealing" per se. In other words, all else being equal. :-D
----------------------------------------------------------- Completion Deadline: two days before the day after tomorrow
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Roger Wright wrote:
Both are primarily creative tasks, with less science than art required. Both are credentialed by performance and passion, not papers from a school.
i would disagree and say that i would prefer a college graduate with a degree in anything because they will have more experience in organizational communication (esp. if they did more than just course work) a degree represents follow through and the ability to handle multi tasking while under stress with multiple deadlines
Roger Wright wrote:
but it's not the stuff degrees are made for
what are degrees made for?
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jgasm wrote:
because they will have more experience in organizational communication
I totally disagree. This is the single biggest deficiency of most colleges; personal work is emphasized much more than group projects. By graduation, a student will have worked in a group of two or three maybe a dozen times on relatively short projects. (The issue isn't learning how to get along or any of that touchy-feely crap, but how to get the job done when dealing with people of varied skills and personalities and at least one loser who screws up every project he touches.)
Anyone who thinks he has a better idea of what's good for people than people do is a swine. - P.J. O'Rourke
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That's what I was thinking. Is there enough in there for a whole degree course? (Mind you, I'm coming from the point of view of a Scottish 4-year degree. Other countries tend to do shorter degrees)
Upcoming events: * Glasgow: Mock Objects, SQL Server CLR Integration, Reporting Services, db4o, Dependency Injection with Spring ... * Reading: Developer Day 5 Ready to Give up - Your help will be much appreciated. My website
I reckon it would be coming close to 4 years of study these days. The downside is that by the end of the 4 years, you'd have to relearn half of it! In my mind it would be a mixture of a fine arts degree and a computer science. To be a proper web developer takes more cross discipline training than most other fields I've encountered. I can't believe I'm saying positive things about something I despise so much in the past! The world has gone topsy turvy! :) - Phil
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thanks ! :) this situation is purely hypothetical.
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jgasm wrote:
this situation is purely hypothetical.
:confused:
Vasudevan Deepak Kumar Personal Homepage Tech Gossips
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Neither, I'd prefer someone self-taught :rolleyes: At least they'd be more problem solving (once I'd established they were have decent).
Ed.Poore wrote:
someone self-taught At least they'd be more problem solving
Absolutely true.
Vasudevan Deepak Kumar Personal Homepage Tech Gossips
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if you were hiring for a position title "web application something-or-another" would your interest be more piqued by a degree titled: Bachelors in Web Development or Bachelors in Computer Science I'm not asking if you would have them code something. I really just want to know which title sounds more "appealing" per se. In other words, all else being equal. :-D
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A school wouldn't have a hard time putting together a 2- or 3-year Bachelor's program in Web Development but I've yet to see one do it. So if someone has Bachelors in Web Dev on their CV, they'd better say which school it was at otherwise they're definitely making it up. You don't need a CompSci degree to be a good web developer but it can help alot, especially if you went to a more theoretical program where the emphasis was problem-solving as opposed to programming homework.
--- http://jobmob.co.il/ All Together Now
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Can you even get a Bachelors in Web Development? If I saw that, I would think something's fishy.
- S 50 cups of coffee and you know it's on!
Probably. I recently went back to college. Although i have been in the industry for years i felt i was at a bit of a disadvantage not having a degree, especially since i want to go into teaching. The degree course i am doing can lead to 5 different awards based on your choice of final year modules. Its probably quite sensible really as it allows you to specialize in the final year (Which most degrees do anyway) but the name of the award you get is a bit more relevant to what you actually studied. We don't have a BSc in Web Development but there is one for Internet and Multimedia. My final year is made up of mainly modules covering database development, application development, systems analysis and methodologies etc so i will get a BSc (hons) in Computing and Information Technology. others could be more Networking or classic CS based. Jon