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Every developer is self taught

Sarah 🦄 on January 05, 2021

I know this might be a "hot take" (or whatever the kids call it) but hear me out. I see a lot in the tech community about college vs. self-taught. ...
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Pablo Bermejo • Edited

There is not such a thing as “self-taught”. Even if you learn independently, on your own without going to college, you always have to lean on materials created by others. You need to read tutorials, watch videos or whatever online material that others created with the intention of teaching you. That’s how this community is kept alive. There are no self-taught developers

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Sarah 🦄

That's kind of why I put the asterisk at the bottom but I think self-taught in this context relates to self motivated/organised/driven. You are not driven by the need to pass a class but you drive yourself to do better.

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Ximena

Yes, to me that is what self-taught means.

You use other's content to learn but why are you looking for this content? What is the motivation to go through it and actually finish the video, blog post, tutorial, course, etc? Your parents are probably no longer telling you to "do your homework" that was assigned by a teacher at a school you go to on a regular basis. You most likely, want to improve and stay on top of best practices, whether it is for a job, money, or fun curiosity.

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Javier Gonzalez

I'll take the opposite stance. There is no learning without teaching yourself. Tutorials, videos, books, and learning resources are information. Information by itself is worthless if not processed by you. Knowledge cannot be transferred from a teacher to a student, a teacher can only point to a path to learn, resources, and can share with the students the pitfalls and dead ends that they experienced. But learning only happens when you do the work and start to gain the experience for yourself.

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Alessandro Candido

Yes, I agree with you, and I share your opinion more than the one you were replying to.

On the other hand I would like to stress the importance of teachers: it's exactly as you said, teachers are just pointing you the way, but lots of times if you have to find it on your own it's quite inefficient and time-consuming, with a lot of trial-and-error involved.

A good teacher can prepare you a priceless path, pointing you to the correct learning material and the order you should familiarize with concepts. Than the learning job it's completely up to the student, but the final result it's obtained together.

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erica (she/her)

A big part of development is continuous learning! There are many fields where a lot of rules and best practices are pretty much set in stone, or at least not evolving very quickly. Tech however, tends to move at lightning speed. Being able to keep up with evolving languages and frameworks is a must.

Higher education gives you a good base level. You made a very good point about having to tread water when starting a job and being tossed unfamiliar frameworks. While I'm sure there are some devs that can get away with just being really good at what they're good at (like the remaining COBOL pros), it's an edge case.

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sheriffderek

Bravo!

My view is currently that everyone is self-taught: but that they find the scenarios where they can 'create knowledge' differently.

Sometimes it's trial and error, repetition, a guide, a mentor, someone who pushes you to think, seeing how other people think, projects, situations you didn't expect.

The materials and teachers can be different. Sometimes the teacher is a mean person who downvoted your questions, or a friend at a meetup or a college professor - but that only YOU can learn. We as teachers (through whatever medium) can only provide the situation / the context / the opportunity and the support for YOU to learn.

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hassan_k_a profile image
.

I think what we can get from the college degree is the ability to work under pressure and learning new stuff quickly. we need to be ready for exams and also prep reports and do a graduation project and etc. working under pressure is hard to replicated in the self taught environment.

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Joel N. Walkley

I'm at a new job that is transition out of Ext.js but still supporting it. I'm coming in with React experience, but it sure has been challenging for me to make that shift to that other (older) framework. Just wanted to post a comment since I haven't run into anyone else who has worked with Ext.js

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sarahcodes_dev profile image
Sarah 🦄

Hey! Yeah I imagine going from React to Ext.js would be really challenging, they are so different! Best of luck with it!

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petrunov • Edited

To the guy that says that there is no-such thing as "self-thaught" as you always learn from others or the guy who says he is self-thaight despite going to college/doing courses - both arguments are as invalid, as they are contradictory to each other.

Try being 14-15 year old with no knowledge of English and no knowledge on anything basically who picks up on the language and programing mostly by yourself - hint - it takes YEARS to get to "hello world!" and it might happen so that you learn what is the "data types" in your programming language after you've already completed several projects, for example.

I am pretty sure it's not like that in college.. it's quite different even if someone just tips you on the right direction, let alone teach you.

And of course - we're all stepping on the knowledge of everyone before us, as we're born naked, helpless and knowing basically nothing.

The difference is in the number and size of the obstacales you had to go through alone and all the mistakes and wrong directions in the maze of knowledge. Picking up a second programing language cannot be compared with learning to program for the first time.. even grasping the concepts of variables, functions and loops is quite a big deal if you start from scratch. Basically every little bit of knowledge is a huge advantage, that's why school and university are actually pretty important (take it from a guy who only got to 12th grade).

I felt obliged to rant a bit, as I myself had little to no direction or help and basically zero hours of being taught programming (and English).

As much as everyone is entitled to their own opinion and self-confidece, that's something no one can take away from people who are truly self-taught

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Paddy3118

In our industry "self taught" refers to learning your first language through predominantly self study rather than class learning with a teacher/tutor.

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sarahcodes_dev profile image
Sarah 🦄

Yes exactly!

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nbmj1822 profile image
nbmj1822

I agree with that. I am a self taught learner who want to develop my skills to understand web development :)

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Seanmclem

Very little of what I do on any given day - was influenced by my college education. Mostly it taught me perseverance

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Sarah 🦄

Same here! It taught me to stick to deadlines and also communication skills, group projects were the worst but they prepare you for working on a team.

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David Mutebi

True 👏🤝

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Hector Miguel Soto Hernandez • Edited

Interesting article, but I think this is specially for sole developers in which the challenge is intensive to achieve the desire result with no mentors to boost the development progress, why? (you must wonder) because in the industry your boss or people around you do not care about your tools, progress, troubles, or the lack of knowledge from certain area that you have in that moment, the only thing that matters is that it is working at 100% (that is, with validations, security and the whole IT department work in it); at this point I think you might understand what I mean. I'm glad that you have learn firstly by yourself and then with help but in real scenario to aim to success software it is better with IT department. So, in my experience from friends, family and own job not every developer is "self-taught" as you said because in IT department already exists rules, code-templates (for good practices), approaches to fix common problems, etc.
Also I agree with you about the degree, it only helps to get to the recruiters (or " get in the door" as you said); again I'm so glad about your motivation to learn by your self but the conclusion above explains well.

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Andreas Møller

I would go the other way and say that there are no self taught developers.