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by pm90
3425 days ago
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> Why can't they? Offer easy entry, and the promise of a high salary, and more people will want to do these jobs. If everyone got to do what they wanted, we'd have a surplus of firemen and veterinarians, and few accountants and garbage men. I'm not gonna argue too much on this since people seem to have set their minds on it. Having personally taught in American high schools as part of various outreach programs...I can say that, no, programming is not something you can "train" everyone into. Sure, there are some with aptitude for it, others without it who do want to learn and can be "trained" as you say. But you need to rethink the whole public education system from a very early stage to make it easier for students to be good learners and ultimately good programmers. > easy entry, and the promise of a high salary Its already there, yet....crickets. |
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You're not wrong, people are just stubborn?
> programming is not something you can "train" everyone into
Would you be as happy to conclude that teaching isn't something everyone can do?
If there is some general failing with the entire educational system, "immigration" won't fix that; but this is a tractable/solvable (if difficult) problem if foreign countries are able to produce good students.
> Its already there
Is it? What counts a "high", outside SV? Why are SV wages limited to SV?
Previous posters describe CS majors working for Starbucks/McDonalds - if entry is easy, how could this be?