Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have no experience in IT. Is it a stupid idea to start getting various certifications and/or take AWS courses? Will I stand a chance to get a job or should I just go to school and get a masters degree? (I have bachelor in science, but haven’t worked in the field). Majority of my experience is subbing and childcare… thanks for honest opinions and advise. I don’t really know what I want to do, but would like to eventually work from home and be flexible
This is why you have no chance.
Millions of h1xbs waiting for green cards
Courtesy of your own gov
https://www.hindustantimes.com/world-news/us-news/lawmakers-in-us-address-green-card-backlog-h-1b-issues-at-immigration-summit-101710237628161.html?utm_source=ht_site_copyURL&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=ht_site
Anonymous wrote:I have no experience in IT. Is it a stupid idea to start getting various certifications and/or take AWS courses? Will I stand a chance to get a job or should I just go to school and get a masters degree? (I have bachelor in science, but haven’t worked in the field). Majority of my experience is subbing and childcare… thanks for honest opinions and advise. I don’t really know what I want to do, but would like to eventually work from home and be flexible
Anonymous wrote:I have no experience in IT. Is it a stupid idea to start getting various certifications and/or take AWS courses? Will I stand a chance to get a job or should I just go to school and get a masters degree? (I have bachelor in science, but haven’t worked in the field). Majority of my experience is subbing and childcare… thanks for honest opinions and advise. I don’t really know what I want to do, but would like to eventually work from home and be flexible
Anonymous wrote:Some of the Microsoft Fundamentals certificates are pretty good, like the one for Azure or for Security, Compliance, and Identity. They are not too difficult or expensive to obtain. They look good on the LinkedIn profile.
But they will in no way be a stepping stone to an IT career. They'd be good for moving into a F/T office job.
As far as a graduate degree goes, my advice these days is to only consider it if it is absolutely required. 2 years out of the workforce for a full-time master's program, $50,000+ in student loans, the opportunity cost of not working all weigh against it. Also, many people start but do not finish, which would make it completely useless...and you'd still need to pay the loans.
Anonymous wrote:OP how old are you?