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  3. How do you get your first job?

How do you get your first job?

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  • S Stephen Dycus

    Um... I am a college student... I'm going to a community college. I have a year left before I qualify for transfer to a university's bachelor degree program (I'll sort of have an associates degree... it's strange). Unless you mean I'm not a University student... I just wish it wasn't necessary to waste my money getting a piece of paper when I'm competent enough for an entry level position already. I'm essentially throwing money away so that a company will *trust* that I'm competent and give me an interview. I've already researched the big classes that you'd take in a BS CS course of study. I've read books on more in depth OOP concepts, books on algorithms, messed around with assembly, took a course on Ethics in the field of IT... There is plenty for me to learn on the job, but not much the university will teach me. So the only reason I'm going to go to college is so businesses will trust that I know my stuff. A $20k job would pay the bills at this point, especially if I split the rent with my girlfriend or my best friend... I'm just tired of being a burden to my family. : /

    W Offline
    W Offline
    wizardzz
    wrote on last edited by
    #70

    Get your associates like thing finished up and apply around. I would consider people with Associates, plus you worked somewhere for 2 years, too. Honestly that's all I like college education to show me. Hell look at nurses, many only have associates and for all purposes do almost as much as a doctor. Don't move without a job though. Just as general life experience, unless you are wealthy or financially backed by someone, do not do this.

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    • W wizardzz

      That's your opinion Mark, but are you going to act like there is no totem pole in the business world? Do you really like to use your chance to hire talent as a gamble, or opportunity to "give chances" to people? And like I said, it costs very little time and money to get an Associates, and that is enough to prove to me that a candidate feels they are themselves worth investing in. 2 years, a few thousand dollars, hell do it online even faster, but why should I invest time and resources in them if they don't invest in themselves? Also, have you opened a position lately? Have you even seen an applicant without a degree?

      R Offline
      R Offline
      R Giskard Reventlov
      wrote on last edited by
      #71

      wizardzz wrote:

      That's your opinion Mark

      Yes, I know: I'm not trying to be offensive.

      wizardzz wrote:

      why should I invest time and resources in them if they don't invest in themselves?

      Fair point well made.

      wizardzz wrote:

      Also, have you opened a position lately? Have you even seen an applicant without a degree?

      Over the years, many. I think we'll have to agree to disagree: I am not convinced that a lack of a degree, of itself, is enough of a reason to preclude considering someone for a role.

      "If you think it's expensive to hire a professional to do the job, wait until you hire an amateur." Red Adair. nils illegitimus carborundum me, me, me

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      • N Not Active

        Stephen Dycus wrote:

        I'll be 25 at that point

        Holy crap! You'll too old to even do anything by then. Might as well just give up now. :rolleyes: Do you think right out of university you will work into a corner office? Let me give you some hard facts about life. Not going to happen! Most people don't even begin to be successful in their careers until they have worked ten years or so. From what you have said so far it doesn't seem as though you have work ethic or drive to succeed and very much.


        Failure is not an option; it's the default selection.

        S Offline
        S Offline
        Stephen Dycus
        wrote on last edited by
        #72

        Guess I've been in more of a rush since my existential crisis last year. 25 seems young until you think that it's a fourth of my life (assuming I make it to 100 *crosses fingers*). I'm not THAT unrealistic in my expectations. XD Seriously, I could be happy on $20k and a cheap apartment. It gives me something to work for. As it is, I have no disposable income, no private space (living with my mom... half the week), no stability (have to pack up my computer and close every half week to go to another house), and a dream I've had for 9 years that I'm still going to have to wait 3 more years on. : / I don't mean to bitch, I'm just impatient I suppose. It sucks not having a job in general, let alone a programming job.

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        • S Stephen Dycus

          I've been programming since I was in middle school nine years (almost 10) ago. I've known since then that this was the career for me. The only problem is, I can't find my first job. It doesn't help that I'm in a small town with no programming jobs. I'm slowly working towards a degree but due to two bad years, I feel I'm falling behind. I'm 22... I should have graduated by now but I haven't even earned my associates degree. I don't know if I can make it through 3 more years of college. It's very tempting to save up some money and just move to a big city with lots of jobs (like Seattle) but I'd have no guarantee that I'd get a job. I'm so bored with my life. I want to earn a living programming. How do you get your first programming job? <.>

          M Offline
          M Offline
          Matt U
          wrote on last edited by
          #73

          I began programming when I was 12 years old. I am 25 now (just turned 25 on April 2). I landed my job 2 years and 7 months ago. However, I did not start out as a programmer. Here is what happened. I worked on a production line, a typical warehouse employee in a typical warehouse environment. I did not have a special job so to speak. My job was to test consumer printers as part of the remanufacturing process. I was in that position for about a year and a half. And then came the new sub-department for actually repairing the printers (mechanically). With my general electronics knowledge (not genius or anything; just many years of general experience with computers and hardware), I helped them design the process as well as developing more efficient methods for repairing various issues. And then came the opportunity of a lifetime. Our facility director (at the time; not here anymore due to bad practice) loved, loved, loved, loved Microsoft Access. His little Access database was hosted on a Windows XP shared hard drive. He expected 20+ users to be able to access this file *simultaneously*. I saw the trouble with this immediately. So I waited patiently. I studied the general workflow of the Access database. And then I took off. ON MY OWN TIME at home, for no pay, I designed a database in Microsoft SQL Server 2008. And then I started planning a front-end software solution. Once this solution was at a good point I popped it onto a laptop and brought it to work. I practically slapped it on the director's desk and told him to have fun. He asked me what exactly I had done. So I explained that I had solved the issues we had with people being locked out of the Access database, how TERRIBLY SLOW Access was, how much time was being wasted by using it, etc. He then asked me how feasible it would be to implement my system into the production environment. So I spoke with our IT guy, asking about what types of servers we had full access to (and where they were). And I told him about what was going on. So he backed me up and spoke to the director with me the next day. The director was absolutely stunned and became very persistent on getting the software up and running. We had a few of the more tech savvy production users run the software for a few days, simply to catch any bugs that may have been lingering. A few popped up and I took care of them. Here's where I am NOW: I work in the IT office. I have a desk, a computer and a few servers at my disposal. I am presented with projects by various members of management,

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          • D David Crow

            There are exceptions to every rule, except taxes and death. The point is, until Bill, Larry, or Paul made something of themself, they were no different than the guy with no college education.

            "One man's wage rise is another man's price increase." - Harold Wilson

            "Fireproof doesn't mean the fire will never come. It means when the fire comes that you will be able to withstand it." - Michael Simmons

            "Show me a community that obeys the Ten Commandments and I'll show you a less crowded prison system." - Anonymous

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            Z Offline
            ZurdoDev
            wrote on last edited by
            #74

            They also were not out applying for jobs. They were making their own. :)

            There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.

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            • S Stephen Dycus

              I've been programming since I was in middle school nine years (almost 10) ago. I've known since then that this was the career for me. The only problem is, I can't find my first job. It doesn't help that I'm in a small town with no programming jobs. I'm slowly working towards a degree but due to two bad years, I feel I'm falling behind. I'm 22... I should have graduated by now but I haven't even earned my associates degree. I don't know if I can make it through 3 more years of college. It's very tempting to save up some money and just move to a big city with lots of jobs (like Seattle) but I'd have no guarantee that I'd get a job. I'm so bored with my life. I want to earn a living programming. How do you get your first programming job? <.>

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              G Offline
              GenJerDan
              wrote on last edited by
              #75

              Joined the Army as a Satllite Ground Station System Repairer and my last boss was a computer geek. He let me try automating this, that, and the other thing on site. Got out of the Army, came back as a civilian, messed around with programming some more (still not my official job), and finally knew enough to qualify for an actual computer-related job (if you count babysitting a Sun and an HP(-UX) machine). Wrote some web apps for that job, finally re-classed my position as programmer. So, it's easy to get a programming job. Just invest 15 years doing something else in a land that doesn't have round doorknobs until they finally relent.

              No dogs or cats are in the classroom. My Mu[sic] My Films My Windows Programs, etc.

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              • S Slacker007

                Yep, you're a whiner.

                "the meat from that butcher is just the dogs danglies, absolutely amazing cuts of beef." - DaveAuld (2011)
                "No, that is just the earthly manifestation of the Great God Retardon." - Nagy Vilmos (2011) "It is the celestial scrotum of good luck!" - Nagy Vilmos (2011) "But you probably have the smoothest scrotum of any grown man" - Pete O'Hanlon (2012)

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                Pete OHanlon
                wrote on last edited by
                #76

                For some reason, this reminds me of Dilbert.

                *pre-emptive celebratory nipple tassle jiggle* - Sean Ewington

                "Mind bleach! Send me mind bleach!" - Nagy Vilmos

                CodeStash - Online Snippet Management | My blog | MoXAML PowerToys | Mole 2010 - debugging made easier

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                • S Stephen Dycus

                  Guess I've been in more of a rush since my existential crisis last year. 25 seems young until you think that it's a fourth of my life (assuming I make it to 100 *crosses fingers*). I'm not THAT unrealistic in my expectations. XD Seriously, I could be happy on $20k and a cheap apartment. It gives me something to work for. As it is, I have no disposable income, no private space (living with my mom... half the week), no stability (have to pack up my computer and close every half week to go to another house), and a dream I've had for 9 years that I'm still going to have to wait 3 more years on. : / I don't mean to bitch, I'm just impatient I suppose. It sucks not having a job in general, let alone a programming job.

                  N Offline
                  N Offline
                  Not Active
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #77

                  Stephen Dycus wrote:

                  It sucks not having a job in general

                  Tell that to the 8.3% of the US population that is out of work. Stop bitching and whining.


                  Failure is not an option; it's the default selection.

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                  • W wizardzz

                    Well, work anywhere is going to be more terrible than school. If someone couldn't do that for a few works, they definitely couldn't do work for the same amount of time.

                    Richard Andrew x64R Offline
                    Richard Andrew x64R Offline
                    Richard Andrew x64
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #78

                    wizardzz wrote:

                    work anywhere is going to be more terrible than school.

                    I couldn't disagree more. I love work. I look forward to it. But I hated school.

                    The difficult we do right away... ...the impossible takes slightly longer.

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                    • N Not Active

                      Stephen Dycus wrote:

                      It sucks not having a job in general

                      Tell that to the 8.3% of the US population that is out of work. Stop bitching and whining.


                      Failure is not an option; it's the default selection.

                      S Offline
                      S Offline
                      Stephen Dycus
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #79

                      Huh? Because I'm part of 8.3% of unemployed US citizens means I can't complain? Your logic is beyond me. o.O

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                      • S Stephen Dycus

                        I've been programming since I was in middle school nine years (almost 10) ago. I've known since then that this was the career for me. The only problem is, I can't find my first job. It doesn't help that I'm in a small town with no programming jobs. I'm slowly working towards a degree but due to two bad years, I feel I'm falling behind. I'm 22... I should have graduated by now but I haven't even earned my associates degree. I don't know if I can make it through 3 more years of college. It's very tempting to save up some money and just move to a big city with lots of jobs (like Seattle) but I'd have no guarantee that I'd get a job. I'm so bored with my life. I want to earn a living programming. How do you get your first programming job? <.>

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                        P Offline
                        PIEBALDconsult
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #80

                        When I was working on my associates degree I spent a bunch of time reading manuals in the office of the guy who kept the college's computer (a VAX 11-785) running. Then, when I was working on my bachelors degree, he called and asked if I'd be interested in working for him. It just so happened that I needed a co-op job at that time. Definitely finish your degree.

                        Stephen Dycus wrote:

                        move to a big city with lots of jobs

                        Would you like to be unemployed there? (I wouldn't.) After I got my bachelors degree and my wife and I got married I moved from Boston to southern California (where she was) -- I spent nearly a year unemployed there, but hey! it was southern California. :cool: If you do want to move, move somewhere you want to be. I also wouldn't worry about moving with a job waiting for you. It's easier to get a job once you're a local candidate. I expect that with little or no actual experience being a non-local candidate will be too much for most employers.

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                        • realJSOPR realJSOP

                          I heard "Prius" was Japanese for "pussy".

                          ".45 ACP - because shooting twice is just silly" - JSOP, 2010
                          -----
                          You can never have too much ammo - unless you're swimming, or on fire. - JSOP, 2010
                          -----
                          "Why don't you tie a kerosene-soaked rag around your ankles so the ants won't climb up and eat your candy ass." - Dale Earnhardt, 1997

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                          G Offline
                          gavindon
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #81

                          oh for ... sake.. :doh: mighta been better if it had the right car...

                          Common sense is not a gift it's a curse. Those of us who have it have to deal with those that don't.... Be careful which toes you step on today, they might be connected to the foot that kicks your butt tomorrow. You can't scare me, I have children.

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                          • S Stephen Dycus

                            I've been programming since I was in middle school nine years (almost 10) ago. I've known since then that this was the career for me. The only problem is, I can't find my first job. It doesn't help that I'm in a small town with no programming jobs. I'm slowly working towards a degree but due to two bad years, I feel I'm falling behind. I'm 22... I should have graduated by now but I haven't even earned my associates degree. I don't know if I can make it through 3 more years of college. It's very tempting to save up some money and just move to a big city with lots of jobs (like Seattle) but I'd have no guarantee that I'd get a job. I'm so bored with my life. I want to earn a living programming. How do you get your first programming job? <.>

                            J Offline
                            J Offline
                            Joe Woodbury
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #82

                            Answered an ad in the paper looking for Apple II 6502 assembly language programmers. I got my next job by going through every resource I could find (this was back before the internet) and making a list of all the companies in a my target city that looked like hired 80x86 assembly or C programmers AND who sold shrink wrapped software. I stored these all on index cards. I sent my resume to every one and made follow up calls. I recently worked with a top notch junior programmer who had started in the assembly area, showed smarts and initiative, was asked to write some simple test programs, which became more complicated. He was going to University at the same time and just before graduation, we hired him full time on salary (vs. part time wages.)

                            Stephen Dycus wrote:

                            just move to a big city with lots of jobs (like Seattle) but I'd have no guarantee that I'd get a job

                            Great rewards require great risks. I wouldn't move to Seattle, though, but San Jose. (You could try Boston, North Carolina Research Triangle, Salt Lake City, Dallas, Austin, all depending on what kind of programming you want to do.) Go on dice.com. Search for the kind of programming you want to do (and/or are good at doing) and narrow it down by region so see the rough demand (do be careful, most locations are notorious for having lots of postings for the same job, which is fine in San Jose, but terrible in, say, Casa Grande.) THEN MOVE. Most places will not interview non-local candidates and fewer will pay for the move. (Especially true in California--companies don't like hiring people and having them quit months later because the place isn't the Garden of Eden they thought it was going to be.) If you are single and not a spoiled materialist, take a job with a start up paying crap wages. Put in a year or two doing the best job you can and then move on. You may not be earning much money, but you would be earning experience, which is far more valuable in the long run. Be willing to accept technical support and/or testing jobs at places with a record for promotion and/or tuition matching. One great advantage of these kind of jobs is that they give you a perspective many engineering students lack. It also shows initiative and drive. Frankly, all other things being equal, if I have a resume of a fresh college graduate and someone self taught who had been working technical support and testing, I'd lean toward the latter. Finally, you're very young. Stop panicking, stop partying, s

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                            • J Joe Woodbury

                              Answered an ad in the paper looking for Apple II 6502 assembly language programmers. I got my next job by going through every resource I could find (this was back before the internet) and making a list of all the companies in a my target city that looked like hired 80x86 assembly or C programmers AND who sold shrink wrapped software. I stored these all on index cards. I sent my resume to every one and made follow up calls. I recently worked with a top notch junior programmer who had started in the assembly area, showed smarts and initiative, was asked to write some simple test programs, which became more complicated. He was going to University at the same time and just before graduation, we hired him full time on salary (vs. part time wages.)

                              Stephen Dycus wrote:

                              just move to a big city with lots of jobs (like Seattle) but I'd have no guarantee that I'd get a job

                              Great rewards require great risks. I wouldn't move to Seattle, though, but San Jose. (You could try Boston, North Carolina Research Triangle, Salt Lake City, Dallas, Austin, all depending on what kind of programming you want to do.) Go on dice.com. Search for the kind of programming you want to do (and/or are good at doing) and narrow it down by region so see the rough demand (do be careful, most locations are notorious for having lots of postings for the same job, which is fine in San Jose, but terrible in, say, Casa Grande.) THEN MOVE. Most places will not interview non-local candidates and fewer will pay for the move. (Especially true in California--companies don't like hiring people and having them quit months later because the place isn't the Garden of Eden they thought it was going to be.) If you are single and not a spoiled materialist, take a job with a start up paying crap wages. Put in a year or two doing the best job you can and then move on. You may not be earning much money, but you would be earning experience, which is far more valuable in the long run. Be willing to accept technical support and/or testing jobs at places with a record for promotion and/or tuition matching. One great advantage of these kind of jobs is that they give you a perspective many engineering students lack. It also shows initiative and drive. Frankly, all other things being equal, if I have a resume of a fresh college graduate and someone self taught who had been working technical support and testing, I'd lean toward the latter. Finally, you're very young. Stop panicking, stop partying, s

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                              P Offline
                              PIEBALDconsult
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #83

                              Joe Woodbury wrote:

                              but terrible in, say, Casa Grande

                              There's a job in Casa Grande? :confused: :-D

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                              • J Joe Woodbury

                                Answered an ad in the paper looking for Apple II 6502 assembly language programmers. I got my next job by going through every resource I could find (this was back before the internet) and making a list of all the companies in a my target city that looked like hired 80x86 assembly or C programmers AND who sold shrink wrapped software. I stored these all on index cards. I sent my resume to every one and made follow up calls. I recently worked with a top notch junior programmer who had started in the assembly area, showed smarts and initiative, was asked to write some simple test programs, which became more complicated. He was going to University at the same time and just before graduation, we hired him full time on salary (vs. part time wages.)

                                Stephen Dycus wrote:

                                just move to a big city with lots of jobs (like Seattle) but I'd have no guarantee that I'd get a job

                                Great rewards require great risks. I wouldn't move to Seattle, though, but San Jose. (You could try Boston, North Carolina Research Triangle, Salt Lake City, Dallas, Austin, all depending on what kind of programming you want to do.) Go on dice.com. Search for the kind of programming you want to do (and/or are good at doing) and narrow it down by region so see the rough demand (do be careful, most locations are notorious for having lots of postings for the same job, which is fine in San Jose, but terrible in, say, Casa Grande.) THEN MOVE. Most places will not interview non-local candidates and fewer will pay for the move. (Especially true in California--companies don't like hiring people and having them quit months later because the place isn't the Garden of Eden they thought it was going to be.) If you are single and not a spoiled materialist, take a job with a start up paying crap wages. Put in a year or two doing the best job you can and then move on. You may not be earning much money, but you would be earning experience, which is far more valuable in the long run. Be willing to accept technical support and/or testing jobs at places with a record for promotion and/or tuition matching. One great advantage of these kind of jobs is that they give you a perspective many engineering students lack. It also shows initiative and drive. Frankly, all other things being equal, if I have a resume of a fresh college graduate and someone self taught who had been working technical support and testing, I'd lean toward the latter. Finally, you're very young. Stop panicking, stop partying, s

                                S Offline
                                S Offline
                                Stephen Dycus
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #84

                                Maybe Google will give me an interview... This is my biggest problem, not getting interviews. I know the basics (be persistent, call, apply in person, etc). Maybe I should look at getting professional help with my resume? Google's hiring 15 minutes down the street so maybe I'll get an interview (I shine in interviews ^^). But the data center doesn't have a phone number... maybe I should show up tomorrow and request more information on the job (already emailed my resume)?

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                                • S Stephen Dycus

                                  That's the thing though... what's the person that can't afford the $20k it costs per year supposed to do? Especially if congress decides to double loan interest rates. How is that person supposed to get work experience to get the job? It's a never ending cycle. They can't get the experience to get the job that would BE good experience. Give the guy a chance. The fact is, you give a test to that guy with the degree right?... why not give the test to the guy without one. If he does just as well or better, then what does the guy who has a degree have over him? Proof that he can pay for a piece of paper? It doesn't mean he learned anything more than the other guy. It sucks how much money matters in this world. I'm going to have to fork out $40 k (minus scholarships if I get any) to get a *chance* at supporting myself. And that's not including interest. <.>

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                                  J Offline
                                  Joe Woodbury
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #85

                                  My second son is attending a very good state university that costs $2250 a semester, easily covered by Pell Grants (or working a minimum wage job.)

                                  Stephen Dycus wrote:

                                  They can't get the experience to get the job that would BE good experience. Give the guy a chance.

                                  How about stop blaming everyone else and taking responsibility for your own life? A high school classmate attended MIT loan free by going a semester, working a semester, going a semester and so on (and this was back post-Carter when the economy was MUCH worse than it is now.) Other classmates joined the military. I went to a cheap religious college, dropped out and worked my way through film school without any student loans. As I stated below, I got my first programming job by first taking any work I could get (including less than minimum wage jobs) and doing a continual job search all the time teaching myself. I went to work for a terrible company which paid me squat, but it was a start. When I left my second programming job, my place was taken by a guy who had studied classical piano in college while he worked as a software salesman. He dropped out and took a job as an extremely junior "engineer" who did no programming at all; his job was to do all the crap nobody else wanted to do, like proof read readme.txt files and verify that master disks were okay. How did he get that job? Through persistence.

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                                  • P PIEBALDconsult

                                    Joe Woodbury wrote:

                                    but terrible in, say, Casa Grande

                                    There's a job in Casa Grande? :confused: :-D

                                    J Offline
                                    J Offline
                                    Joe Woodbury
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #86

                                    Probably at the McDonald's just off the freeway.

                                    1 Reply Last reply
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                                    • J Joe Woodbury

                                      My second son is attending a very good state university that costs $2250 a semester, easily covered by Pell Grants (or working a minimum wage job.)

                                      Stephen Dycus wrote:

                                      They can't get the experience to get the job that would BE good experience. Give the guy a chance.

                                      How about stop blaming everyone else and taking responsibility for your own life? A high school classmate attended MIT loan free by going a semester, working a semester, going a semester and so on (and this was back post-Carter when the economy was MUCH worse than it is now.) Other classmates joined the military. I went to a cheap religious college, dropped out and worked my way through film school without any student loans. As I stated below, I got my first programming job by first taking any work I could get (including less than minimum wage jobs) and doing a continual job search all the time teaching myself. I went to work for a terrible company which paid me squat, but it was a start. When I left my second programming job, my place was taken by a guy who had studied classical piano in college while he worked as a software salesman. He dropped out and took a job as an extremely junior "engineer" who did no programming at all; his job was to do all the crap nobody else wanted to do, like proof read readme.txt files and verify that master disks were okay. How did he get that job? Through persistence.

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                                      S Offline
                                      Stephen Dycus
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #87

                                      I'm not blaming anyone. XD I'm the one who blames myself for everything that goes wrong in not only my own life but those that are close to me. I was simply asking a valid question: How does one gain work experience in an industry that requires work experience to start? My FA is running out. They sent me a letter that says they'l only pay for X amount of credit hours. I'm not sure if this is until I finish my associates degree and start working towards a Bachelor degree or whether I'm f***** in that department. : / I don't understand how someone can work and pay for college. I spent a whole year working 2 part time jobs, with the bills split 3 ways, and STILL couldn't make ends meet. There's no WAY I could make enough to pay the bills AND save up $20k making roughly $5k a year. It's just unrealistic. The only way I see that working is to have a full time job... which typically requires a degree (thus another never ending cycle). I don't know how old you are but cost of living and schooling is drastically different than even a few years ago.

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                                      • S Stephen Dycus

                                        Maybe Google will give me an interview... This is my biggest problem, not getting interviews. I know the basics (be persistent, call, apply in person, etc). Maybe I should look at getting professional help with my resume? Google's hiring 15 minutes down the street so maybe I'll get an interview (I shine in interviews ^^). But the data center doesn't have a phone number... maybe I should show up tomorrow and request more information on the job (already emailed my resume)?

                                        J Offline
                                        J Offline
                                        Joe Woodbury
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #88

                                        Stephen Dycus wrote:

                                        maybe I should show up tomorrow and request more information on the job (already emailed my resume)?

                                        That's exactly what you should do. Show them you are interested. Be willing to take any job there, even if not in IT. Maybe they are hiring janitors (I'm not being sarcastic; I mopped floors at college. I also did data entry and did lots of temp work, including shredding paper and moving boxes from one place to another.) My oldest son whines he can't find work, yet at his age, his older sister found jobs (with a local economy than was worse than it is now.) How? By walking into places, finding the manager and asking them whether they are hiring and when she can have her interview. What does my son do? He fills out applications. I did that too when I was a teen and it worked just as well. Another idea; go for an associates degree. Take time off, establish yourself in anything to do with IT and then pursue a bachelors degree all the while teaching yourself. A colleague teamed up with some classmates and wrote some iPhone games. They didn't make any money, but it was experience and could lead to something more.

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                                        • J Joe Woodbury

                                          Stephen Dycus wrote:

                                          maybe I should show up tomorrow and request more information on the job (already emailed my resume)?

                                          That's exactly what you should do. Show them you are interested. Be willing to take any job there, even if not in IT. Maybe they are hiring janitors (I'm not being sarcastic; I mopped floors at college. I also did data entry and did lots of temp work, including shredding paper and moving boxes from one place to another.) My oldest son whines he can't find work, yet at his age, his older sister found jobs (with a local economy than was worse than it is now.) How? By walking into places, finding the manager and asking them whether they are hiring and when she can have her interview. What does my son do? He fills out applications. I did that too when I was a teen and it worked just as well. Another idea; go for an associates degree. Take time off, establish yourself in anything to do with IT and then pursue a bachelors degree all the while teaching yourself. A colleague teamed up with some classmates and wrote some iPhone games. They didn't make any money, but it was experience and could lead to something more.

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                                          Stephen Dycus
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #89

                                          I'm leading a team at my college to making an Android game. I'm the sole programmer and it's all new technology but I believe I have it down pat now... mostly XD. I'm using the engine I'm making for my own game. I'm not sure about how my Associate Degree works... it's technically a transfer program specifically for getting the Gen Ed courses done before going to a 4-Year University. Maybe I should see if I can take a few classes and turn it into a Programming AS... I've got nothing against janitorial work. I'd prefer cleaning toilets to the crap I went through at Best Buy... twice...

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