Kung asa ka mas malipay.. mao ang kwaa nga kurso... walay pulos maski sa tan-aw nimo nga you can earn like hundreds of pesos someday pero dili nimo love ang kana nga kurso... then it will be useless...
Kung asa ka mas malipay.. mao ang kwaa nga kurso... walay pulos maski sa tan-aw nimo nga you can earn like hundreds of pesos someday pero dili nimo love ang kana nga kurso... then it will be useless...
mas ma u more on application when speaking of computer skills kay kung theory permi boring ka u ...nindot gud application para maka learn...learning by doing ba......
i would say both... start with the theories (concepts) then explore and apply....
sa sayop ra man pod ta makakat-on.. =)
tynum and markcuering both got a point. You can learn a lot in schools and it's also a good place to start. Generally having a degree is important especially if we talk about other fields (outside IT), say doctors and lawyers, you really need to have degree. But it's also a fact that school is not the only learning ground especially when we talk inside IT field, and when you finish your degree too, you still learn much more on experience. So it ends up to the person. Learning and not learning, Achieving success (which means making lots of mistakes too) and failing(doesn't mean it ends there) depends on the person's character.
ya sakto sad si maikeru... some people do need a degree... kay most of them are handling people's lives.. like as u say mga doctors, nurses, engineers, etc... and it really depends on the person kung kugehan sad...
hope nka get ka ug some insights sa among mga reply mr. thread starter....
BY THE WAY.... MOST OF THE RICHEST MAN ON EARTH ARE SCHOOL DROP OUTS....
like Bill Gates(microsoft founder), Larry Ellison(oracle corp. founder), Steven Paul Jobs(apple founder) and many more... hehehe...
im not encouraging you to drop out too... just consider your options... think of something where you could be productive....
well, most of the school drops outs ends up a miserable lifeor labor job.
I'm not encouraging you to proceed... just consider your optionsof course, think of something you really SURE that you'll become productive.
![]()
1. Labor jobs are not something to be looked down upon, as long as its an honorable job. Idol nako ang mga drivers, janitors, ug farmers. They are the backbone of our society.
2. Some school drop outs end up miserable in life because they are confused on what job offers to choose from.
3. Some students drop out of school because the school's teaching methods doesn't match the student's learning style. It's not the student's fault; it's the school's fault for not teaching well. Forcing someone to learn in a linear order is completely ineffective if the student prefers global and creative thinking.
Who said its something to looked down? maybe, only for those who have such $$$ yet still turns his life into miserable... who wants that kind of life anyway? but we can't changed that....for everything gets its own side.
I guess school are not meant for everyone... especially to those brilliant drop out...and dumbass brat!
By the way,why blame the school? in the first place, they didn't pulled you to get in![]()
What a nice way to debate, sidestepping inconvenient issues and points that you made in your previous posts.
How do you explain call center agents working in our country? Most of them are college graduates, but they are working in a glorified blue-collar job. Many have CS/IT and Engineering diplomas but they have no skills. Yet, their job is honorable (and they speak better English than us!). It is an honest job that brings food to their table.
See, no need to ride in your high horse.![]()
Similar Threads |
|