Surely you have heard several times about the benefits of a sector in full growth such as Information Technologies. This industry has zero unemployment, offers good salaries and allows -in many cases- to work remotely. But how can you be trained to access this area? Can you enter having studied a career related to social sciences, such as economics? Can you do it without having university or technical training?
The training offer in the Information Technology sector has been diversifying. To the traditional teaching system offered by public and private universities; the University of Work, or the Technological University, have been added other innovative proposals that incorporate training in the classroom and in the workplace; proposals that are 100% online with professionals in the sector, and programs from foreign universities.
These initiatives are often the gateway to more specific IT training, and can even encourage people to change careers.
Hoy, en una nueva edición de La Mesa TIC, recorrimos cómo es hoy la oferta de formación en Tecnologías de la Información para jóvenes …y también para no tan jóvenes. Nos acompañaron, para eso: Fabiana Hernández, coordinadora del Programa b_IT de Cuti e Inefop y Ejecutiva People Talent en Cuti; Pablo Correa, analista de sistemas, docente de informática y coordinador educativo en ÁNIMA; Carinna Balsamo, ingeniera en Computación y directora de Jóvenes a Programar; y Aníbal Gonda, «Evangelizador Técnológico» en GeneXus.



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