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Enabling Students to Become Professionals

Enabling Students to Become Professionals

A talk to a education audience bout my experience in a Computer Science program at University. This was given at POSSCON 2011.

Corey Donohoe

January 17, 2012
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Transcript

  1. Enjoy Life Tuesday, March 29, 2011 I live in SF,

    I like biking, surfing, snowboarding, beer. Normal hacker stuff. This is a beautiful day from earlier this season at lake tahoe.
  2. Participating since 2000 http:/ /www.flickr.com/photos/27316226@N02/3000888100 Tuesday, March 29, 2011 I

    stumbled upon open source and linux in 1999, I was contributing to projects within a year. I strongly believe that finding open source early on opened up a lot of opportunities for me.
  3. Work @ GitHub Tuesday, March 29, 2011 Now I work

    here, it’s probably the best job I’ve ever had. A lot of my open source work and enjoying what I do led to me landing the job i wanted. We build software collaboration tools.
  4. Open Source and Students http:/ /www.flickr.com/photos/knittymarie/3542395756 Tuesday, March 29, 2011

    The majority of college graduates I meet aren’t ready for “the real world” when it comes to software development today’s talk is enabling students to be ready for real software jobs after graduation. Here’s what it was like for me...
  5. Young dumb and full of vision Tuesday, March 29, 2011

    I bummed around for two years after high school, went to a local college, graduated in 4 years. I did not program before college, most of my classmates had. So I had to work hard.
  6. Undergraduate in CS Tuesday, March 29, 2011 pretty small CS

    department, some truly amazing educators. a “computer lab” full of visual studio stuff, a linux box that i had to beg for access to.
  7. Enlightenment Tuesday, March 29, 2011 I got to learn about

    library management, release cycles, collaboration, design discussions We were all passionate about making pretty things for Linux workstations. My formal education was complemented by this participation
  8. Hacked Shit Tuesday, March 29, 2011 we built things we

    used, we were involved with the users of our stuff we were all friends, and we helped each other out where possible
  9. Graduation Tuesday, March 29, 2011 i stuck to my studies

    for theory, hacked on open source projects as practice, i got better. i debated grad school but decided to find real work, a lot of that drive came from real world stresses i decided it was time to find a job.
  10. Get a Job http:/ /www.flickr.com/photos/49938597@N00/5223416841 Tuesday, March 29, 2011 In

    my naivety I thought my education, open source contributions and passion would get me a job. Boy was I in for a reality check.
  11. http:/ /www.flickr.com/photos/lwr/517712577/ Tuesday, March 29, 2011 The catch 22 is

    that employers typically want N years of experience 6-7 years ago, open source didn’t count, so you couldn’t even get your foot in the door “We’re sorry but I just can’t put someone without experience into this position.”
  12. Take a Hike http:/ /www.flickr.com/photos/slieschke/4149185893/ Tuesday, March 29, 2011 “We’re

    sorry but I just can’t put someone without experience into this position.” Unfortunately experience means, years of “professional” work. Even if your professional work is complete crap.
  13. Independent Studies Tuesday, March 29, 2011 There were actually lots

    of opportunities here to help with researchers and their grants. As an undergrad I was lucky enough to have two, much more challenging than my normal curriculum. Buuuuuut, employers don’t care.
  14. Internships Tuesday, March 29, 2011 There aren’t enough internships. Kicks

    off reputation management but little to show at the end. We’re accepting intern applications for this summer at GitHub.
  15. Why Did I Go? http:/ /www.flickr.com/photos/bex_x_pi/3180576600/ Tuesday, March 29, 2011

    It wasn’t just my school, almost everyone I meet had similar experiences Or they just dropped out because they found an opportunity w/o the degree Did I only go to make my mom proud?
  16. Work for Big Guys http:/ /www.flickr.com/photos/mjb/38571308 Tuesday, March 29, 2011

    After a depressing 3-4 months, someone hired me in an area that I didn’t really enjoy. I was underpaid and contracting for a fortune 5 company. Normal corporate ladder bullshit, I didn’t find this fulfilling.
  17. What Did I Miss? http:/ /www.flickr.com/photos/bex_x_pi/3180576600/ Tuesday, March 29, 2011

    I couldn’t help but wonder why I’d worked so hard but found a job that was unsatisfying. Looking back, I realize I understood what was necessary, the market didn’t yet. It does now, and a lot of that can be achieved by participation.
  18. Tuesday, March 29, 2011 Collaboration is one aspect of software

    development that doesn’t happen enough in education. The days of the wizard in the basement building everything himself are over. Collaboration is a day to day thing in every shop out there right now.
  19. Contemporary Software http:/ /www.flickr.com/photos/wonderlane/2316339816/ Tuesday, March 29, 2011 Collaboration is

    what modern software is about. Peer review of patches and design decisions, testing and deployment involve the whole team. Exposure to new things through working with others.
  20. Geographically Distributed http:/ /www.flickr.com/photos/andresmusta/5492899843 Tuesday, March 29, 2011 Teams are

    becoming more and more geographically distributed. People need to have good communication skills in order to be effective. I remote pair programmed with a co-worker in NZ for almost 2 years, very rewarding.
  21. Coding is Social http:/ /www.flickr.com/photos/atmos/175465956 Tuesday, March 29, 2011 Large

    projects are using it with a lot of success, Rails, Jquery, Node. Users begin to interact with each other and in a lot of cases it’s a meritocracy. The picture is a lot of early adopters to rails, we built projects, but the first time we’d all met in person.
  22. Reputation Management Tuesday, March 29, 2011 In this social media

    crazy culture we’ve seen develop over the past few years, hackers need a rep. Students/Graduates need a way to stand out when they go looking for jobs. It’s not just what you know, sometimes it’s who you know too.
  23. Encourage Involvement http:/ /www.flickr.com/photos/ozarksredcross/5152044443/ Tuesday, March 29, 2011 Educators should

    encourage involvement. Have them create a GitHub or BitBucket in some of their early labs. I’m still unsure about how to do labs, my CS labs were nothing like real software development. Help your students understand that reading source code is invaluable.
  24. Travel http:/ /www.flickr.com/photos/bhenry/124519641/ Tuesday, March 29, 2011 Open Source conferences

    put you in a great place to meet other passionate people. There are free conferences available and often student discounts. You can learn about emerging tech as well as meet people who might need employees. Let them know that the job they want, might not be in the town they’re from.
  25. *SOC http:/ /www.flickr.com/photos/mjb/38571308 Tuesday, March 29, 2011 Google Summer of

    Code and Ruby Summer of Code offer students money to improve the ecosystem. They have mentors and are required to explain their efforts over the summer. Looks good on a resume.
  26. Student’s Responsibility http:/ /www.flickr.com/photos/toastkid/4316891537/ Tuesday, March 29, 2011 The best

    you can do is tell your students that they need to make it happen. Recommendations are nice but they don’t help if people are basing employment solely on years experience. It’s basically collegiate or extra-curricular activities, and they need to practice. It can be really rewarding.
  27. OSS & Businesses Tuesday, March 29, 2011 there’s a huge

    surge in businesses being created by talented open source hackers. we’re professionals in probably the most exciting time in computing. the work that we do can directly impact our friends and family, great ideas are adopted.
  28. Regular People http:/ /www.flickr.com/photos/samgrover/36998596/ Tuesday, March 29, 2011 The socially

    inept nerd stereotype is slowly going away, normal people are computer savvy. Often start as boutique consultancies, move on to create products with recurring income. You don’t need mega global partnerships to make good money and have fun.
  29. Working with Friends http:/ /www.flickr.com/photos/holman/5383038805/ Tuesday, March 29, 2011 These

    businesses end up hiring friends from projects, because you know their friends skill-sets. This is fun because it tends to be a flat organization and everyone’s opinions are equal. These are my friends, coworkers, and my “bosses” are in there too.
  30. Corporate Ladder? http:/ /www.flickr.com/photos/vkx462/3013865271/ Tuesday, March 29, 2011 Climbing the

    corporate ladder is of no interest to me. The likelihood that you’ll become an exec at some fortune 50 is pretty low. If I’m going to spend much of my adult life working, I want to enjoy it.
  31. Tuesday, March 29, 2011 Software developers can enjoy a much

    higher quality of life than a lot of other people. The difference comes from people finding jobs they’re passionate about. I think happiness is undervalued and often overlooked in employment.
  32. Tuesday, March 29, 2011 Chad highlights patterns that have helped

    him through his career. Ongoing exploration/learning, finding work that you love, enjoying your life outside of your work.
  33. The Jobs are Out There http:/ /www.flickr.com/photos/suzan-a/114046250/ Tuesday, March 29,

    2011 There is a shortage of talented people in technology. The job you want exists in mobile/web/media, but you need to make it happen. Find work that’s rewarding because you spend so much of your life doing it.
  34. Enabling your Students http:/ /www.flickr.com/photos/pedestriantype/4789244416/ Tuesday, March 29, 2011 I

    can’t think of anything more fulfilling than helping people live wonderful lives. If 5% of your students are successful w/o OSS, what if you could get them to 50% w/ OSS involvement. Think of how amazing all of those “thank you for helping me” emails will feel.
  35. So, WTF, Man. http:/ /www.flickr.com/photos/bearpark/3149679619 Tuesday, March 29, 2011 Some

    of my friends/coworkers went to school, some didn’t. You can survive in this industry without a formal degree. I’m glad I got one, but I think that a CS degree alone isn’t enough.
  36. So, WTF, Man. http:/ /www.flickr.com/photos/bearpark/3149679619 Tuesday, March 29, 2011 I

    think the lessons learned in open source give students a competitive advantage in the job market. I also think it gives them a competitive advantage in life.
  37. So, WTF, Man. http:/ /www.flickr.com/photos/bearpark/3149679619 Tuesday, March 29, 2011 The

    most fulfilling part of my job is putting smiles on people’s faces. Students, if you hustle, I swear that fulfilling work is out there. Educators please motivate your students to work on things outside of the classroom.
  38. http:/ /www.flickr.com/photos/danielslaughter/64038881/ Tuesday, March 29, 2011 Thank You. If you

    have any questions, feel free to talk to me. (Plug GitHub free for educators, and the drinkup tonight)