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Getting into the minds of the next IT generation

Getting into the minds of the next IT generation

By:  Vanessa Ho  On: 27 Apr 2006 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

If companies want to hire some of the best computer programming minds coming out of university today, they should offer them jobs that challenge their brains, according to a group of Canadian university computer science students.

Some participants have already got their feet wet working in the IT industry. Sean Henderson, a third-year U of T computer science student, spent last summer at the City of Toronto’s help desk, but is expecting to soon move on to other areas of the industry.

“The only thing I was doing was things like jiggling a cord to get a printer working. That’s not my idea of problem-solving,” he said.

This summer, Henderson landed an internship position with Microsoft in Seattle where he will be working on security updates for Windows XP.

Some of the students at the roundtable weren’t interested in a career at a company like Google or Microsoft but instead wanted to pursue careers in the realm of academia and become professors to teach the next generation of IT students.

VALUABLE EXPERIENCE

Many said they are taking what they learn from the ACM-ICPC competition and applying it to their studies and future careers.

“Some of the adrenalin factor of [competing] and the love of problem-solving transfers over [to the real world]. The great thing about this competition is that you get to work with people of different mindsets; that [lets you] develop good collaboration skills,” said Furrow.

Many students, like Zachary Friggstad, who is in his first year of his Masters of Computer Science at the U of A, plan on putting their participation in the ACM-ICPC on their résumés, hoping it will lead to job offers.

His classmate Neitsch said that having the ACM-ICPC experience makes it easier to get a job.

“If you have ACM on your résumé, it’s pretty much a given that you are a good programmer,” Neitsch said.

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Vanessa Ho Vanessa Ho is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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