but we were forcefed STEM at every turn by school, media, and most importantly, our parents. Itโs where the money is, and not money for moneyโs sake, but money for job and financial security. Clearly, the siren song was hard to resist, not just for me, but for droves of people my age.
Great post that I feel like is more relevant than ever. I donโt regret my decision in pursuing CS because Iโm quite passionate for it, but I know a few peers that regret it (one of which switched to another college 3 years into his Bachelorโs).
Thereโs definitely a lot of misleading that happens when people talk about tech jobs. One of the first lectures in my college was the professor praising people for choosing CS, assuring them itโs the right choice, then showing us a graph of average salaries in the industry. โYou see, web developers earn $110K per year! Software engineers a little more so!โ. It also came with more talk about how companies are always on the lookout for talent and finding a job should be super easy compared to other fields.
Maybe that was the case ~10 years ago, but it certainly doesnโt seem to be now. I hope that more instructors would be more honest that CS is not for everyone, itโs a long and difficult journey that not everyone would want to put up with. Itโs also not as lucrative and stable as some people romanticize it to be. Just my $0.02.
I earned a CS degree, and I love programming, but I wait tables. Gives me more time with my kids; and frankly, at the time I left school, most CS jobs involved doing things I found unethical, like SEO capture and HVT.