this post was submitted on 15 Oct 2023
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You're right, you're probably not gonna go from rando 18 year old who has only ever used an iPhone for their computing needs to even someone who can do even the "college intern" grunt work of a software dev team.
The typical on-ramp in our industry for someone like that is to come up through the help desk or data center where you do get to pull wires, carry supplies, rack and stack, manage inventory, etc. And probably this is where many apprenticeships would begin, too, if the person had literally no prerequisite knowledge.
But the bootcamp system to create devs directly is also fine. I'd just love to see more worker-oriented structure around it so we don't have cheapass bootcamps flooding the job market with people that perhaps have the bare minimum skills and only on paper. Or predatory bootcamps locking people into jobs at shitty companies that teach them awful ways of working that their next company has to undo.
It really, really, really doesn't take a 4 year Computer Science degree from a university to work a typical software engineer job. I've worked with folks with no college education, history degrees, electrical engineering degrees, etc. Folks that have come up through the help desk, through the data center, through bootcamps, etc.
Let's make that even easier to do.
I agree, I guess the context of the meme made it look like I was saying people need a 4 year degree, but I don't believe that. It helps, but it's not necessary at all.
I was mainly saying I don't think a transitional master and apprentice setup would be easily workable
I agree that an apprentice working with a single "master" probably wouldn't work very well. But I'm also not sure how frequently other apprenticeships still operate on that model. Perhaps it's more common for other trades due to a preponderance of independent contractors, but there's no saying that the apprentice needs to be beholden to one individual "master."