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How long would it take to become a computer engineer and an IT professional.?
4 Answers
- Tom DLv 41 decade agoFavorite Answer
Unlike some professions, such as doctors and lawyers, there are no official requirements to become an IT professional.
In fact, most IT professionals did not study computers in college. Many programmers or network engineers did not graduate from college.
However, the very best programmers and network engineers generally went to college and studied a technical field like math, science or computers.
In general, you can call yourself a programmer if you can claim at least six month's on-the-job experience with some programming language, such as MS Access, Java, C#, or else with some web-based programming language such as Cold Fusion.
Of course, the hard part is getting someone to let you get six month's experience on the job!
There are many ways get this experience: you can study programming at home or school, you can take certification exams for some programming languages, you can design web pages for your friends.
Probably the best way is to convince your boss to let you design a computer app to automate your existing job. Your first app won't be very good, but your boss probably won't know, and once you have that experience on your record you can switch to a high paid job!
Source(s): I've been a professional programmer for 12 years, and I socialize with other programmers, most of whom did not study computers in college. - 1 decade ago
About 133 credit hours based on 3 semester year and a **** load of studying. Close to about 5 years for the average You also need to be really smart and dedicated. It is not for everyone.
Electrical engineers make the best programmers for some reason. I would recommend getting a dual degree in computer and electrical engineering. It will only add about 18 credit hours. Much better off to get a engineering degree than computer science degree. Some companies only hire engineers to program.
In college about 60% start out as doctor, lawyer, or engineer. A lot more business major graduate every year than all those combined.
Source(s): EE from University of Florida