to personal development. but to ability ot do the job?

Dana

Josh Remus writes:

> I have a great degree in General Studies.  I was originally a music major,
> switched to CS, dropped out of school, and that was the only degree I could
> go back and complete in reasonable time.
>
> However - having said that - except for specific engineering-type jobs
> (which I don't considering cf-coding, in general), I think a well-rounded
> humanities/arts degree means much more than a CS one.
>
> Not to start a flame war.  I know too many CS/CE-types who have no ability
> to communicate in any medium.
>   -----Original Message-----
>   From: Matthew Small [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>   Sent: Wednesday, October 01, 2003 9:49 AM
>   To: CF-Community
>   Subject: Re: CF Salary Range
>
>
>   I would like to know how many people on the list actually have a CS/MIS
> degree.
>
>   I do.
>
>   - Matt Small
>     ----- Original Message -----
>     From: Dana Tierney
>     To: CF-Community
>     Sent: Wednesday, October 01, 2003 9:37 AM
>     Subject: Re: CF Salary Range
>
>
>     OK, I will concede that the SQl class was helpful. And despite the focus
> on
>     PASCAL in comp sci 1 and 2, I learned a lot about programming per se.
> But
>     whether I could have learned the same material without being present in
> a
>     classroom from 10 to 11 on Tuesdays and Thursdays is what I am
> questioning.
>     I think so...
>
>     Dana
>
>     Dana
>
>     Jeffry Houser writes:
>
>     >   If the classes you took focused on a language, I can understand how
> they
>     > may not be applicable to web development.  But, a good curriculum will
>     > concentrate on theory.  I apply programming theory every day.  I'm
> sure
>     > that many will agree that to get anywhere when building dynamic web
> pages
>     > you need to know something about database design.
>     >
>     > At 01:05 AM 10/1/2003 -0500, you wrote:
>     > >
>
>
>

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