Advertisement
Promo

Training Toolkit

Story: UK sees worst IT skills shortage for a decade

  • Previous comment

Posted by: Andrew Meredith (Thursday 14 February 2008, 8:24 AM)

  • Reply

It starts at school

When I were a lad, back in the early paleolithic, we were taught Computer Studies, which was a ground up course in what a computer is and in general terms how it works. We had hard drives with the cases off and short animated films showing the data going too and fro. We used a programming language called CESIL, Computer Education in Schools Instructional Language. It was kind of like assembler, only it had a PRINT command with preformatted output alongside register shifts and such. The lessons I took then, some 25 years ago would work just as well today AND THAT'S THE POINT. The fundamentals haven't changed in the slightest. By half way through my teens I understood, in general terms what went on inside a computer and the sorts of things it could and couldn't do. From that grounding, learning the specifics of how to use a given app was a very short step, and the same went for the next version of the same software or indeed a different package doing the same thing.

The kind of computer education you get in schools today is entirely superficial; a term on Word version XYZ; a term on Excel version ABC. Not how to use a word processor, just which button to press in Word. It will be obsolete, by the time they leave school, let alone a quarter of a decade later. Sure it gets quick results, but they are only skin deep and they don't prepare people for a working life with ubiquitous IT, let alone future IT people.

Andrew Meredith

Andrew Meredith
IT Consultant, Chippenham, Wiltshire
Member since: January 2004

Site Activity Rating:

3

This member is ranked #65 in our top 100


  • Previous comment

  • Reply to this comment
  • Return to story
  • Report this as offensive


Full Talkback thread

Video icon

Video


Skip Sub Navigation Links to CNET Brand Links

Help

Become part of the ZDNet community.

Newsletters