Fenn wrote:
Computer Science in the USA where I live requires no certification of any kind. Knowing the job usually is more important than anything else. For example my college roommate went on an internship and never came back to complete his degree. He has been happily working every since. Not all fields are like that but some are.
Yes my bother has a degree in electrical engineering (which he never used) before moving to computers and software engineering. He's been a freelance software engineer for 35 years and managed projects for > 100 companies.
He's been telling me for years that coding doesn't require a degree, just patience for repetitive tasks and focus. The industry is a great place for people on the spectrum and he's worked with many. However all of them have at least a college/tech diploma where they get some basic certification before they are let loose as backroom eSolutions software developers. But yes you are right, coding doesn't require certification, most companies can train their staff. Companies he's worked for don't bother checking qualification, they just do competency testing of recruits.
There is, however, an oversuppy of university graduates. He's getting more recruits now with masters degrees. So in a competitive job market having paper qualification is still an advantage
when you are getting a foot in the door, but as you say, once you have the experience/software certification then paper qualification is irrelevant.