Should I include education section in resume if I dropout college after K-12 [duplicate]

The name of the pictureThe name of the pictureThe name of the pictureClash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP





.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;







up vote
6
down vote

favorite













This question already has an answer here:



  • How to mitigate the negative effect of quitting college in my CV? [duplicate]

    4 answers



This is my follow up question to the How do I make companies to consider me for the job irrespective of my very young age?



After completing K-12 I joined college for graduation but within a month I drop out college and became self guided student. Some of the reasons for the dropout was:




  • Syllabus esp. of programming was very less.


  • None of student was really interested in programming.




So, I felt miserable in the class, decided to drop out and became self guided student. Now, I am about to began my first job search and wondering should I include my educational qualification in the resume or should I just leave education section? Also, If my future employer asks me about my educational qualification, what should I tell him? Should I be honest or should I make some story?







share|improve this question














marked as duplicate by gnat, IDrinkandIKnowThings, Michael Grubey, yochannah, Jenny D Apr 7 '15 at 11:57


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.










  • 6




    I think lying to a potential employer is always a bad idea.
    – Paul Hiemstra
    Nov 23 '13 at 10:51










  • I also feel same.
    – user12416
    Nov 23 '13 at 11:47






  • 1




    @user12416 - The only thing potential employers need to know about is your interest. If you can show them some form of programming skill, no matter how minor, they will evaluate that for their needs. All discussions of education are a distraction. You are having some issues with English, but they aren't major. Keep posting questions and keep working on improving your writing. Look for a mentor.
    – Meredith Poor
    Nov 23 '13 at 22:45










  • @MeredithPoor Thanks for your advise. I am working on them. I am also trying to find a mentor but unsure where to find one. I don't know any person in real world who is interested in mentoring me. Any advise about finding a mentor?
    – user12416
    Nov 24 '13 at 9:20






  • 1




    @user12416 - The way I got there in the late 1970s was through sales offices for computer companies. Find people that are selling computers in your area, get to know the sales people, tell them you're looking for a user that is small and isn't having any luck getting help. This probably won't happen very fast. The sales people may think you're trying to take their business. Some stores allow developers to post a card on their bulletin board, so that anyone walking through can pick from a list. I'm not sure how that works in your area.
    – Meredith Poor
    Nov 24 '13 at 9:41
















up vote
6
down vote

favorite













This question already has an answer here:



  • How to mitigate the negative effect of quitting college in my CV? [duplicate]

    4 answers



This is my follow up question to the How do I make companies to consider me for the job irrespective of my very young age?



After completing K-12 I joined college for graduation but within a month I drop out college and became self guided student. Some of the reasons for the dropout was:




  • Syllabus esp. of programming was very less.


  • None of student was really interested in programming.




So, I felt miserable in the class, decided to drop out and became self guided student. Now, I am about to began my first job search and wondering should I include my educational qualification in the resume or should I just leave education section? Also, If my future employer asks me about my educational qualification, what should I tell him? Should I be honest or should I make some story?







share|improve this question














marked as duplicate by gnat, IDrinkandIKnowThings, Michael Grubey, yochannah, Jenny D Apr 7 '15 at 11:57


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.










  • 6




    I think lying to a potential employer is always a bad idea.
    – Paul Hiemstra
    Nov 23 '13 at 10:51










  • I also feel same.
    – user12416
    Nov 23 '13 at 11:47






  • 1




    @user12416 - The only thing potential employers need to know about is your interest. If you can show them some form of programming skill, no matter how minor, they will evaluate that for their needs. All discussions of education are a distraction. You are having some issues with English, but they aren't major. Keep posting questions and keep working on improving your writing. Look for a mentor.
    – Meredith Poor
    Nov 23 '13 at 22:45










  • @MeredithPoor Thanks for your advise. I am working on them. I am also trying to find a mentor but unsure where to find one. I don't know any person in real world who is interested in mentoring me. Any advise about finding a mentor?
    – user12416
    Nov 24 '13 at 9:20






  • 1




    @user12416 - The way I got there in the late 1970s was through sales offices for computer companies. Find people that are selling computers in your area, get to know the sales people, tell them you're looking for a user that is small and isn't having any luck getting help. This probably won't happen very fast. The sales people may think you're trying to take their business. Some stores allow developers to post a card on their bulletin board, so that anyone walking through can pick from a list. I'm not sure how that works in your area.
    – Meredith Poor
    Nov 24 '13 at 9:41












up vote
6
down vote

favorite









up vote
6
down vote

favorite












This question already has an answer here:



  • How to mitigate the negative effect of quitting college in my CV? [duplicate]

    4 answers



This is my follow up question to the How do I make companies to consider me for the job irrespective of my very young age?



After completing K-12 I joined college for graduation but within a month I drop out college and became self guided student. Some of the reasons for the dropout was:




  • Syllabus esp. of programming was very less.


  • None of student was really interested in programming.




So, I felt miserable in the class, decided to drop out and became self guided student. Now, I am about to began my first job search and wondering should I include my educational qualification in the resume or should I just leave education section? Also, If my future employer asks me about my educational qualification, what should I tell him? Should I be honest or should I make some story?







share|improve this question















This question already has an answer here:



  • How to mitigate the negative effect of quitting college in my CV? [duplicate]

    4 answers



This is my follow up question to the How do I make companies to consider me for the job irrespective of my very young age?



After completing K-12 I joined college for graduation but within a month I drop out college and became self guided student. Some of the reasons for the dropout was:




  • Syllabus esp. of programming was very less.


  • None of student was really interested in programming.




So, I felt miserable in the class, decided to drop out and became self guided student. Now, I am about to began my first job search and wondering should I include my educational qualification in the resume or should I just leave education section? Also, If my future employer asks me about my educational qualification, what should I tell him? Should I be honest or should I make some story?





This question already has an answer here:



  • How to mitigate the negative effect of quitting college in my CV? [duplicate]

    4 answers









share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:48









Community♦

1




1










asked Nov 23 '13 at 7:56









user12416

3113




3113




marked as duplicate by gnat, IDrinkandIKnowThings, Michael Grubey, yochannah, Jenny D Apr 7 '15 at 11:57


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.






marked as duplicate by gnat, IDrinkandIKnowThings, Michael Grubey, yochannah, Jenny D Apr 7 '15 at 11:57


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.









  • 6




    I think lying to a potential employer is always a bad idea.
    – Paul Hiemstra
    Nov 23 '13 at 10:51










  • I also feel same.
    – user12416
    Nov 23 '13 at 11:47






  • 1




    @user12416 - The only thing potential employers need to know about is your interest. If you can show them some form of programming skill, no matter how minor, they will evaluate that for their needs. All discussions of education are a distraction. You are having some issues with English, but they aren't major. Keep posting questions and keep working on improving your writing. Look for a mentor.
    – Meredith Poor
    Nov 23 '13 at 22:45










  • @MeredithPoor Thanks for your advise. I am working on them. I am also trying to find a mentor but unsure where to find one. I don't know any person in real world who is interested in mentoring me. Any advise about finding a mentor?
    – user12416
    Nov 24 '13 at 9:20






  • 1




    @user12416 - The way I got there in the late 1970s was through sales offices for computer companies. Find people that are selling computers in your area, get to know the sales people, tell them you're looking for a user that is small and isn't having any luck getting help. This probably won't happen very fast. The sales people may think you're trying to take their business. Some stores allow developers to post a card on their bulletin board, so that anyone walking through can pick from a list. I'm not sure how that works in your area.
    – Meredith Poor
    Nov 24 '13 at 9:41












  • 6




    I think lying to a potential employer is always a bad idea.
    – Paul Hiemstra
    Nov 23 '13 at 10:51










  • I also feel same.
    – user12416
    Nov 23 '13 at 11:47






  • 1




    @user12416 - The only thing potential employers need to know about is your interest. If you can show them some form of programming skill, no matter how minor, they will evaluate that for their needs. All discussions of education are a distraction. You are having some issues with English, but they aren't major. Keep posting questions and keep working on improving your writing. Look for a mentor.
    – Meredith Poor
    Nov 23 '13 at 22:45










  • @MeredithPoor Thanks for your advise. I am working on them. I am also trying to find a mentor but unsure where to find one. I don't know any person in real world who is interested in mentoring me. Any advise about finding a mentor?
    – user12416
    Nov 24 '13 at 9:20






  • 1




    @user12416 - The way I got there in the late 1970s was through sales offices for computer companies. Find people that are selling computers in your area, get to know the sales people, tell them you're looking for a user that is small and isn't having any luck getting help. This probably won't happen very fast. The sales people may think you're trying to take their business. Some stores allow developers to post a card on their bulletin board, so that anyone walking through can pick from a list. I'm not sure how that works in your area.
    – Meredith Poor
    Nov 24 '13 at 9:41







6




6




I think lying to a potential employer is always a bad idea.
– Paul Hiemstra
Nov 23 '13 at 10:51




I think lying to a potential employer is always a bad idea.
– Paul Hiemstra
Nov 23 '13 at 10:51












I also feel same.
– user12416
Nov 23 '13 at 11:47




I also feel same.
– user12416
Nov 23 '13 at 11:47




1




1




@user12416 - The only thing potential employers need to know about is your interest. If you can show them some form of programming skill, no matter how minor, they will evaluate that for their needs. All discussions of education are a distraction. You are having some issues with English, but they aren't major. Keep posting questions and keep working on improving your writing. Look for a mentor.
– Meredith Poor
Nov 23 '13 at 22:45




@user12416 - The only thing potential employers need to know about is your interest. If you can show them some form of programming skill, no matter how minor, they will evaluate that for their needs. All discussions of education are a distraction. You are having some issues with English, but they aren't major. Keep posting questions and keep working on improving your writing. Look for a mentor.
– Meredith Poor
Nov 23 '13 at 22:45












@MeredithPoor Thanks for your advise. I am working on them. I am also trying to find a mentor but unsure where to find one. I don't know any person in real world who is interested in mentoring me. Any advise about finding a mentor?
– user12416
Nov 24 '13 at 9:20




@MeredithPoor Thanks for your advise. I am working on them. I am also trying to find a mentor but unsure where to find one. I don't know any person in real world who is interested in mentoring me. Any advise about finding a mentor?
– user12416
Nov 24 '13 at 9:20




1




1




@user12416 - The way I got there in the late 1970s was through sales offices for computer companies. Find people that are selling computers in your area, get to know the sales people, tell them you're looking for a user that is small and isn't having any luck getting help. This probably won't happen very fast. The sales people may think you're trying to take their business. Some stores allow developers to post a card on their bulletin board, so that anyone walking through can pick from a list. I'm not sure how that works in your area.
– Meredith Poor
Nov 24 '13 at 9:41




@user12416 - The way I got there in the late 1970s was through sales offices for computer companies. Find people that are selling computers in your area, get to know the sales people, tell them you're looking for a user that is small and isn't having any luck getting help. This probably won't happen very fast. The sales people may think you're trying to take their business. Some stores allow developers to post a card on their bulletin board, so that anyone walking through can pick from a list. I'm not sure how that works in your area.
– Meredith Poor
Nov 24 '13 at 9:41










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
10
down vote














Should I be honest or should I make some story?




Try to act like a mature professional and avoid all lies. Immaturity is what many employers worry about when a teenager applies for a job. Don't start your search off on the wrong foot.



If you have any relevant educational qualifications, include them. But 1 month of college won't be relevant for any programming jobs I've ever seen- leave that out. The reasons you felt compelled to leave after 1 month aren't likely to make you a better candidate in the eyes of a recruiter/interviewer. Leave them out of your resume.



If you have self-guided educational attainments that could be independently confirmed (such as some sort of certification), you could include that. But if you only have a K-12 education, omit the Education section completely when applying for a programming position. No employers care where their programmers went to High School.






share|improve this answer


















  • 2




    I disagree with omitting High School if its the highest education you have. It's possible that some applicants may not have completed high school, and you want to distinguish yourself from them.
    – DJClayworth
    Nov 23 '13 at 19:05






  • 1




    @DJClayworth - True, even completing high school is some achievement that differentiates from high-school dropouts. But I also think that having a GED or HS diploma says that you at least know how to write and did complete something. Also, if there were any team/group projects, that would give the asker something to put on the resume that demonstrates he/she can work with others. The tough thing is showing that without highlighting the fact that it's just high school.
    – jmort253♦
    Nov 23 '13 at 21:29











  • @jmort253 After 10th grade I took a very competitive entrance test for 10+2 at a very reputed university and qualified it. Then for 2 years I studied there. Maybe adding it can give a weigh to my resume.
    – user12416
    Nov 24 '13 at 4:42










  • @user12416 - While your High School diploma should be listed, in order to seperate yourself from somebody who didn't recieve one or recieved their GED, taking an entrance exam isn't going to make a huge difference. You taking advance courses while in High School isn't a big deal, there are tens of thousands of students every single year, taking advanced college courses while in high school.
    – Ramhound
    Nov 25 '13 at 17:26











  • @Ramhound what you said isn't quite true. Entrance exams in some countries are extremely competitive and to be able to take advanced courses at a highly prestigious university in such a country has a different connotation than say, in the US.
    – Chan-Ho Suh
    Jul 27 '15 at 21:48

















up vote
5
down vote













An issue that you have to address as a part of the hiring process is that dropping out after a month tells me that you make irrational decisions.



Let me explain. You applied to one or more colleges, were accepted, and picked a college and a major. Registered for classes. Started taking classes. Then discovered that




Syllabus esp. of programming was very less.



None of student was really interested in programming.




Not everybody is in college for programming, and that you have to take some classes that are unrelated to programming. So you quit.



What happens when you are asked to perform a task that isn't related to programming. For example become an expert on subject X because we may want to write software for that market next year; or writeup these use cases so we can start the requirements process.



College is more than programming. Your self directed learning is not a broad or as deep as what would be experienced in a college or university.



You need to let them know that you decided that college wasn't for you, and that you are interested in taking classes at night. You will also have to find positions that don't require a college degree, but do allow you to grow into a programming position as you prove yourself. Or you just might have to go back to school.






share|improve this answer



























    up vote
    2
    down vote













    Include any job relevant coursework you completed (they may ask for school records) along with any other self-driven studies (e.g. Standford University has an open Objective-C course.).



    Why you chose not to continue your eduction and how you were able to make yourself a qualified candidate should be explained in your cover letter.






    share|improve this answer



























      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes








      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes








      up vote
      10
      down vote














      Should I be honest or should I make some story?




      Try to act like a mature professional and avoid all lies. Immaturity is what many employers worry about when a teenager applies for a job. Don't start your search off on the wrong foot.



      If you have any relevant educational qualifications, include them. But 1 month of college won't be relevant for any programming jobs I've ever seen- leave that out. The reasons you felt compelled to leave after 1 month aren't likely to make you a better candidate in the eyes of a recruiter/interviewer. Leave them out of your resume.



      If you have self-guided educational attainments that could be independently confirmed (such as some sort of certification), you could include that. But if you only have a K-12 education, omit the Education section completely when applying for a programming position. No employers care where their programmers went to High School.






      share|improve this answer


















      • 2




        I disagree with omitting High School if its the highest education you have. It's possible that some applicants may not have completed high school, and you want to distinguish yourself from them.
        – DJClayworth
        Nov 23 '13 at 19:05






      • 1




        @DJClayworth - True, even completing high school is some achievement that differentiates from high-school dropouts. But I also think that having a GED or HS diploma says that you at least know how to write and did complete something. Also, if there were any team/group projects, that would give the asker something to put on the resume that demonstrates he/she can work with others. The tough thing is showing that without highlighting the fact that it's just high school.
        – jmort253♦
        Nov 23 '13 at 21:29











      • @jmort253 After 10th grade I took a very competitive entrance test for 10+2 at a very reputed university and qualified it. Then for 2 years I studied there. Maybe adding it can give a weigh to my resume.
        – user12416
        Nov 24 '13 at 4:42










      • @user12416 - While your High School diploma should be listed, in order to seperate yourself from somebody who didn't recieve one or recieved their GED, taking an entrance exam isn't going to make a huge difference. You taking advance courses while in High School isn't a big deal, there are tens of thousands of students every single year, taking advanced college courses while in high school.
        – Ramhound
        Nov 25 '13 at 17:26











      • @Ramhound what you said isn't quite true. Entrance exams in some countries are extremely competitive and to be able to take advanced courses at a highly prestigious university in such a country has a different connotation than say, in the US.
        – Chan-Ho Suh
        Jul 27 '15 at 21:48














      up vote
      10
      down vote














      Should I be honest or should I make some story?




      Try to act like a mature professional and avoid all lies. Immaturity is what many employers worry about when a teenager applies for a job. Don't start your search off on the wrong foot.



      If you have any relevant educational qualifications, include them. But 1 month of college won't be relevant for any programming jobs I've ever seen- leave that out. The reasons you felt compelled to leave after 1 month aren't likely to make you a better candidate in the eyes of a recruiter/interviewer. Leave them out of your resume.



      If you have self-guided educational attainments that could be independently confirmed (such as some sort of certification), you could include that. But if you only have a K-12 education, omit the Education section completely when applying for a programming position. No employers care where their programmers went to High School.






      share|improve this answer


















      • 2




        I disagree with omitting High School if its the highest education you have. It's possible that some applicants may not have completed high school, and you want to distinguish yourself from them.
        – DJClayworth
        Nov 23 '13 at 19:05






      • 1




        @DJClayworth - True, even completing high school is some achievement that differentiates from high-school dropouts. But I also think that having a GED or HS diploma says that you at least know how to write and did complete something. Also, if there were any team/group projects, that would give the asker something to put on the resume that demonstrates he/she can work with others. The tough thing is showing that without highlighting the fact that it's just high school.
        – jmort253♦
        Nov 23 '13 at 21:29











      • @jmort253 After 10th grade I took a very competitive entrance test for 10+2 at a very reputed university and qualified it. Then for 2 years I studied there. Maybe adding it can give a weigh to my resume.
        – user12416
        Nov 24 '13 at 4:42










      • @user12416 - While your High School diploma should be listed, in order to seperate yourself from somebody who didn't recieve one or recieved their GED, taking an entrance exam isn't going to make a huge difference. You taking advance courses while in High School isn't a big deal, there are tens of thousands of students every single year, taking advanced college courses while in high school.
        – Ramhound
        Nov 25 '13 at 17:26











      • @Ramhound what you said isn't quite true. Entrance exams in some countries are extremely competitive and to be able to take advanced courses at a highly prestigious university in such a country has a different connotation than say, in the US.
        – Chan-Ho Suh
        Jul 27 '15 at 21:48












      up vote
      10
      down vote










      up vote
      10
      down vote










      Should I be honest or should I make some story?




      Try to act like a mature professional and avoid all lies. Immaturity is what many employers worry about when a teenager applies for a job. Don't start your search off on the wrong foot.



      If you have any relevant educational qualifications, include them. But 1 month of college won't be relevant for any programming jobs I've ever seen- leave that out. The reasons you felt compelled to leave after 1 month aren't likely to make you a better candidate in the eyes of a recruiter/interviewer. Leave them out of your resume.



      If you have self-guided educational attainments that could be independently confirmed (such as some sort of certification), you could include that. But if you only have a K-12 education, omit the Education section completely when applying for a programming position. No employers care where their programmers went to High School.






      share|improve this answer















      Should I be honest or should I make some story?




      Try to act like a mature professional and avoid all lies. Immaturity is what many employers worry about when a teenager applies for a job. Don't start your search off on the wrong foot.



      If you have any relevant educational qualifications, include them. But 1 month of college won't be relevant for any programming jobs I've ever seen- leave that out. The reasons you felt compelled to leave after 1 month aren't likely to make you a better candidate in the eyes of a recruiter/interviewer. Leave them out of your resume.



      If you have self-guided educational attainments that could be independently confirmed (such as some sort of certification), you could include that. But if you only have a K-12 education, omit the Education section completely when applying for a programming position. No employers care where their programmers went to High School.







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited Nov 24 '13 at 1:04

























      answered Nov 23 '13 at 16:06









      Joe Strazzere

      224k107661930




      224k107661930







      • 2




        I disagree with omitting High School if its the highest education you have. It's possible that some applicants may not have completed high school, and you want to distinguish yourself from them.
        – DJClayworth
        Nov 23 '13 at 19:05






      • 1




        @DJClayworth - True, even completing high school is some achievement that differentiates from high-school dropouts. But I also think that having a GED or HS diploma says that you at least know how to write and did complete something. Also, if there were any team/group projects, that would give the asker something to put on the resume that demonstrates he/she can work with others. The tough thing is showing that without highlighting the fact that it's just high school.
        – jmort253♦
        Nov 23 '13 at 21:29











      • @jmort253 After 10th grade I took a very competitive entrance test for 10+2 at a very reputed university and qualified it. Then for 2 years I studied there. Maybe adding it can give a weigh to my resume.
        – user12416
        Nov 24 '13 at 4:42










      • @user12416 - While your High School diploma should be listed, in order to seperate yourself from somebody who didn't recieve one or recieved their GED, taking an entrance exam isn't going to make a huge difference. You taking advance courses while in High School isn't a big deal, there are tens of thousands of students every single year, taking advanced college courses while in high school.
        – Ramhound
        Nov 25 '13 at 17:26











      • @Ramhound what you said isn't quite true. Entrance exams in some countries are extremely competitive and to be able to take advanced courses at a highly prestigious university in such a country has a different connotation than say, in the US.
        – Chan-Ho Suh
        Jul 27 '15 at 21:48












      • 2




        I disagree with omitting High School if its the highest education you have. It's possible that some applicants may not have completed high school, and you want to distinguish yourself from them.
        – DJClayworth
        Nov 23 '13 at 19:05






      • 1




        @DJClayworth - True, even completing high school is some achievement that differentiates from high-school dropouts. But I also think that having a GED or HS diploma says that you at least know how to write and did complete something. Also, if there were any team/group projects, that would give the asker something to put on the resume that demonstrates he/she can work with others. The tough thing is showing that without highlighting the fact that it's just high school.
        – jmort253♦
        Nov 23 '13 at 21:29











      • @jmort253 After 10th grade I took a very competitive entrance test for 10+2 at a very reputed university and qualified it. Then for 2 years I studied there. Maybe adding it can give a weigh to my resume.
        – user12416
        Nov 24 '13 at 4:42










      • @user12416 - While your High School diploma should be listed, in order to seperate yourself from somebody who didn't recieve one or recieved their GED, taking an entrance exam isn't going to make a huge difference. You taking advance courses while in High School isn't a big deal, there are tens of thousands of students every single year, taking advanced college courses while in high school.
        – Ramhound
        Nov 25 '13 at 17:26











      • @Ramhound what you said isn't quite true. Entrance exams in some countries are extremely competitive and to be able to take advanced courses at a highly prestigious university in such a country has a different connotation than say, in the US.
        – Chan-Ho Suh
        Jul 27 '15 at 21:48







      2




      2




      I disagree with omitting High School if its the highest education you have. It's possible that some applicants may not have completed high school, and you want to distinguish yourself from them.
      – DJClayworth
      Nov 23 '13 at 19:05




      I disagree with omitting High School if its the highest education you have. It's possible that some applicants may not have completed high school, and you want to distinguish yourself from them.
      – DJClayworth
      Nov 23 '13 at 19:05




      1




      1




      @DJClayworth - True, even completing high school is some achievement that differentiates from high-school dropouts. But I also think that having a GED or HS diploma says that you at least know how to write and did complete something. Also, if there were any team/group projects, that would give the asker something to put on the resume that demonstrates he/she can work with others. The tough thing is showing that without highlighting the fact that it's just high school.
      – jmort253♦
      Nov 23 '13 at 21:29





      @DJClayworth - True, even completing high school is some achievement that differentiates from high-school dropouts. But I also think that having a GED or HS diploma says that you at least know how to write and did complete something. Also, if there were any team/group projects, that would give the asker something to put on the resume that demonstrates he/she can work with others. The tough thing is showing that without highlighting the fact that it's just high school.
      – jmort253♦
      Nov 23 '13 at 21:29













      @jmort253 After 10th grade I took a very competitive entrance test for 10+2 at a very reputed university and qualified it. Then for 2 years I studied there. Maybe adding it can give a weigh to my resume.
      – user12416
      Nov 24 '13 at 4:42




      @jmort253 After 10th grade I took a very competitive entrance test for 10+2 at a very reputed university and qualified it. Then for 2 years I studied there. Maybe adding it can give a weigh to my resume.
      – user12416
      Nov 24 '13 at 4:42












      @user12416 - While your High School diploma should be listed, in order to seperate yourself from somebody who didn't recieve one or recieved their GED, taking an entrance exam isn't going to make a huge difference. You taking advance courses while in High School isn't a big deal, there are tens of thousands of students every single year, taking advanced college courses while in high school.
      – Ramhound
      Nov 25 '13 at 17:26





      @user12416 - While your High School diploma should be listed, in order to seperate yourself from somebody who didn't recieve one or recieved their GED, taking an entrance exam isn't going to make a huge difference. You taking advance courses while in High School isn't a big deal, there are tens of thousands of students every single year, taking advanced college courses while in high school.
      – Ramhound
      Nov 25 '13 at 17:26













      @Ramhound what you said isn't quite true. Entrance exams in some countries are extremely competitive and to be able to take advanced courses at a highly prestigious university in such a country has a different connotation than say, in the US.
      – Chan-Ho Suh
      Jul 27 '15 at 21:48




      @Ramhound what you said isn't quite true. Entrance exams in some countries are extremely competitive and to be able to take advanced courses at a highly prestigious university in such a country has a different connotation than say, in the US.
      – Chan-Ho Suh
      Jul 27 '15 at 21:48












      up vote
      5
      down vote













      An issue that you have to address as a part of the hiring process is that dropping out after a month tells me that you make irrational decisions.



      Let me explain. You applied to one or more colleges, were accepted, and picked a college and a major. Registered for classes. Started taking classes. Then discovered that




      Syllabus esp. of programming was very less.



      None of student was really interested in programming.




      Not everybody is in college for programming, and that you have to take some classes that are unrelated to programming. So you quit.



      What happens when you are asked to perform a task that isn't related to programming. For example become an expert on subject X because we may want to write software for that market next year; or writeup these use cases so we can start the requirements process.



      College is more than programming. Your self directed learning is not a broad or as deep as what would be experienced in a college or university.



      You need to let them know that you decided that college wasn't for you, and that you are interested in taking classes at night. You will also have to find positions that don't require a college degree, but do allow you to grow into a programming position as you prove yourself. Or you just might have to go back to school.






      share|improve this answer
























        up vote
        5
        down vote













        An issue that you have to address as a part of the hiring process is that dropping out after a month tells me that you make irrational decisions.



        Let me explain. You applied to one or more colleges, were accepted, and picked a college and a major. Registered for classes. Started taking classes. Then discovered that




        Syllabus esp. of programming was very less.



        None of student was really interested in programming.




        Not everybody is in college for programming, and that you have to take some classes that are unrelated to programming. So you quit.



        What happens when you are asked to perform a task that isn't related to programming. For example become an expert on subject X because we may want to write software for that market next year; or writeup these use cases so we can start the requirements process.



        College is more than programming. Your self directed learning is not a broad or as deep as what would be experienced in a college or university.



        You need to let them know that you decided that college wasn't for you, and that you are interested in taking classes at night. You will also have to find positions that don't require a college degree, but do allow you to grow into a programming position as you prove yourself. Or you just might have to go back to school.






        share|improve this answer






















          up vote
          5
          down vote










          up vote
          5
          down vote









          An issue that you have to address as a part of the hiring process is that dropping out after a month tells me that you make irrational decisions.



          Let me explain. You applied to one or more colleges, were accepted, and picked a college and a major. Registered for classes. Started taking classes. Then discovered that




          Syllabus esp. of programming was very less.



          None of student was really interested in programming.




          Not everybody is in college for programming, and that you have to take some classes that are unrelated to programming. So you quit.



          What happens when you are asked to perform a task that isn't related to programming. For example become an expert on subject X because we may want to write software for that market next year; or writeup these use cases so we can start the requirements process.



          College is more than programming. Your self directed learning is not a broad or as deep as what would be experienced in a college or university.



          You need to let them know that you decided that college wasn't for you, and that you are interested in taking classes at night. You will also have to find positions that don't require a college degree, but do allow you to grow into a programming position as you prove yourself. Or you just might have to go back to school.






          share|improve this answer












          An issue that you have to address as a part of the hiring process is that dropping out after a month tells me that you make irrational decisions.



          Let me explain. You applied to one or more colleges, were accepted, and picked a college and a major. Registered for classes. Started taking classes. Then discovered that




          Syllabus esp. of programming was very less.



          None of student was really interested in programming.




          Not everybody is in college for programming, and that you have to take some classes that are unrelated to programming. So you quit.



          What happens when you are asked to perform a task that isn't related to programming. For example become an expert on subject X because we may want to write software for that market next year; or writeup these use cases so we can start the requirements process.



          College is more than programming. Your self directed learning is not a broad or as deep as what would be experienced in a college or university.



          You need to let them know that you decided that college wasn't for you, and that you are interested in taking classes at night. You will also have to find positions that don't require a college degree, but do allow you to grow into a programming position as you prove yourself. Or you just might have to go back to school.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Nov 23 '13 at 17:29









          mhoran_psprep

          40.3k463144




          40.3k463144




















              up vote
              2
              down vote













              Include any job relevant coursework you completed (they may ask for school records) along with any other self-driven studies (e.g. Standford University has an open Objective-C course.).



              Why you chose not to continue your eduction and how you were able to make yourself a qualified candidate should be explained in your cover letter.






              share|improve this answer
























                up vote
                2
                down vote













                Include any job relevant coursework you completed (they may ask for school records) along with any other self-driven studies (e.g. Standford University has an open Objective-C course.).



                Why you chose not to continue your eduction and how you were able to make yourself a qualified candidate should be explained in your cover letter.






                share|improve this answer






















                  up vote
                  2
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  2
                  down vote









                  Include any job relevant coursework you completed (they may ask for school records) along with any other self-driven studies (e.g. Standford University has an open Objective-C course.).



                  Why you chose not to continue your eduction and how you were able to make yourself a qualified candidate should be explained in your cover letter.






                  share|improve this answer












                  Include any job relevant coursework you completed (they may ask for school records) along with any other self-driven studies (e.g. Standford University has an open Objective-C course.).



                  Why you chose not to continue your eduction and how you were able to make yourself a qualified candidate should be explained in your cover letter.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Nov 23 '13 at 14:37







                  user8365



















                      Comments

                      Popular posts from this blog

                      Long meetings (6-7 hours a day): Being “babysat” by supervisor

                      Is the Concept of Multiple Fantasy Races Scientifically Flawed? [closed]

                      Confectionery