I never said they go straight into the developer jobs. I said straight into the industry. As Bosun said, all his useful skills were gained on the job.
Bolded - That is what I am saying, you're agreeing that you don't need to study IT at uni. What you're seeing there is the old mindset that Uni = smarter. Think of how many people you know with Uni degrees who actually still work in that field, I bet it's very few.
Slowly we are moving across to the realisation that VET is a more valuable learning environment, employers are starting to get this.
I wouldn't expect so if they were going straight for a job as a programmer, as with everything you still need to do your time at the bottom of the pile. You wouldn't see too many coming straight out of Uni and landing the roles either.
Data security and encryption.
Uni doesn't necessarily mean smarter, although in most cases it does.
Think of it this way though, you have 2 people applying for the same job. Same IQ / intelligence. One has come out of high school, the other out of a relevant IT course at uni.
Assuming they both score the same in the interview / testing, who will the business hire?
Why would you waste money on training someone to get to the same level as another potential employee who would already have that knowledge from uni? (at no expense to the business) Of course the uni graduate will need to be trained to a degree to meet industry standards, however not nearly as much as the guy straight out of high school.






