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Date:      Wed, 1 Mar 2000 11:06:54 -0800 (PST)
From:      goodleaf <john@home.com>
To:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   In re: Certifications (long and rambling)
Message-ID:  <Pine.BSF.4.21.0003010917290.1205-100000@C702312-A.sttln1.wa.home.com>

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I realize I risk extreme sanction here, but:

I have known several certified idiots, but on the other hand I've actually
taken a short cert course in programming basics, and I have to say I
learned quite a bit. (A vast improvement over the absolutely nothing I
knew prior.) Of course this doesn't qualify me as a software engineer, but
I can do a bit in C and Perl. 

This was at the University of Washington, which AFAIK, does a lot of work
to ensure their cert courses are somewhat rigorous. I think that cert
courses in principle are a tremendously good idea, particularly where the
course teaches basic skills to people who don't know much about the
subject at hand, but who have some education in other things. Clearly,
it's not as good as a full computer science degree, but for people like
me, reasonably intelligent people who already have an education (I have
two degrees already.) a certification course is a Good Thing. 

The problem with cert courses as they exist in most places is that they're
extremely poorly implemented and not held to any particular academic
standard. But this is not an absolute; there are good cert courses, so
I think the knee-jerk prejudice against certification that I see among
UNIX folk is misplaced and unproductive. What would be nice is a
pooling of what we know. Which specific courses are bad? Which schools
are turning out too many idiots?

I'd very much like to see a good FreeBSD cert course out there. If it's
well done, it would teach me a lot and pad my resume. Both things are
good.

I may take the UW's Unix Administration cert course. I'll let you know how
it goes.

Thanks,
John



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