Published earlier this year, but still relevant.

  • BillBurBaggins@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    It’s not your fault, but it sounds like you and probably a lot of other people were misled about what having a degree actually does.

    The most important thing someone looks at when you apply for a job is that you are interested in the thing and capable of doing it. The degree doesn’t really do that but the personal projects do. The degree might be a nice to have on top and helps to convince some people, but you always end up working with people without one anyway.

    • Krono@lemmy.today
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      9 hours ago

      I’m not sure I was misled, what you said was explicitly taught to us at University. I think my degree is the #1 thing on my resume, but of course I also had projects, a few certificates, and multiple attempts at more specific fields.

      Back when I was applying, my GitHub activity was pretty solid green.

      • BillBurBaggins@lemmy.world
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        8 hours ago

        It’s weird because everywhere I’ve ever worked routinely hires people who don’t even know how to make a commit, or anything at all really.

        For some reason even those people are somehow jumping ahead of competent people like you in the queue. It’s also annoying for us because we have to deal with the bad ones that HR delivers.