In case OP dont answer, I can. Trust me, I'm an Engineer. From scratch to 3 month, you can have the very basics. Depends which course, but I assume Web? I work in Web, and after my fancy degree that took freaking 6 years to obtain, I see that my level is at the bottom of the food chain. So with 3 months, I am not sure who would hire you (based on the education alone). However, I am CERTAIN someone would hire you based on the projects you do. Experience and education are almost nothing for employers, compared to accomplishments like a site, an app, a game, etc that shows your skillz. And apart from extremely knowledgeable experts in the field, everyone is Googling 90% of the time. So with the basics, which you HAVE TO REINFORCE BY PERSONAL PRACTICE OR IT'S MEANINGLESS, you can do a cool project that will get you employed easily. I know some IT people too that got their current job without having done any education: they just did projects they thought were interesting, and it caught the eye of their current employer.
scmoua6662 karma
In case OP dont answer, I can. Trust me, I'm an Engineer. From scratch to 3 month, you can have the very basics. Depends which course, but I assume Web? I work in Web, and after my fancy degree that took freaking 6 years to obtain, I see that my level is at the bottom of the food chain. So with 3 months, I am not sure who would hire you (based on the education alone). However, I am CERTAIN someone would hire you based on the projects you do. Experience and education are almost nothing for employers, compared to accomplishments like a site, an app, a game, etc that shows your skillz. And apart from extremely knowledgeable experts in the field, everyone is Googling 90% of the time. So with the basics, which you HAVE TO REINFORCE BY PERSONAL PRACTICE OR IT'S MEANINGLESS, you can do a cool project that will get you employed easily. I know some IT people too that got their current job without having done any education: they just did projects they thought were interesting, and it caught the eye of their current employer.
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