To be clear, by "school" I did mean college/university. I'm happy to report I've never heard anyone bash on the grade/high school someone went to. 😅 (I'm from the US, in case someone's reading this coming from different nomenclature.)
One thing I can say for a 4-year degree is that it gives you time to practice coding in a way that a 12-week bootcamp doesn't. Literally just that one takes longer than the other. But there are so many confounding factors that it's still kind of a wash. You just have to evaluate on a case-by-base basis. Some people learn faster than others. Some people have spent a lot of informal time (outside of school/bootcamp/work/whatever) toying around with computers. I've known some very capable people who couldn't hack it in college, so they dropped out. I've worked with CS graduates whose code was always painful to review. And so on.
I am partial to the fundamentals you're exposed to in a CS curriculum, but (a) you can learn those anywhere and (b) it's never going to cover all the tools/skills/etc you'll need in an actual dev job. So I have to be mindful of my bias.
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To be clear, by "school" I did mean college/university. I'm happy to report I've never heard anyone bash on the grade/high school someone went to. 😅 (I'm from the US, in case someone's reading this coming from different nomenclature.)
One thing I can say for a 4-year degree is that it gives you time to practice coding in a way that a 12-week bootcamp doesn't. Literally just that one takes longer than the other. But there are so many confounding factors that it's still kind of a wash. You just have to evaluate on a case-by-base basis. Some people learn faster than others. Some people have spent a lot of informal time (outside of school/bootcamp/work/whatever) toying around with computers. I've known some very capable people who couldn't hack it in college, so they dropped out. I've worked with CS graduates whose code was always painful to review. And so on.
I am partial to the fundamentals you're exposed to in a CS curriculum, but (a) you can learn those anywhere and (b) it's never going to cover all the tools/skills/etc you'll need in an actual dev job. So I have to be mindful of my bias.