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I have been in a similar frustrating position. I have a degree in marketing. I taught myself to code and spent five years building a huge variety of native and hybrid Android and iOS applications. At one point I eould have rated myself as a 9/10 at iOS and Objective-C at a time when these skills were in severe demand. Unfortunately all recruiters saw is my marketing degree.

Part of me, a large part, wanted to simply tweak my profile to say "computer science." If I had done that I am certain I would have been making $150k years before I finally got there. No one would have known or bothered checking. I was able to blow through fairly technical interviews at smaller companies who weren't as picky including answering all manner of algorithms, data structures and sorting questions on the whiteboard. I actually bothered to back fill on all the knowledge I had missed by reading college text books in my own time. Yet...marketing degree. I was even told that I wasn't technical enough after absolutely acing a particular interview which blew me away.

The filtering system is corrupt and broken, if they are going to discriminate against me based on wrong indicators, why should I have to play their game? Unfortunately my feelings of ethics prevented me from doing what seemed logical. I made it on my own time the hard, boring way. Maybe I am the dumb one for not cheating.




Just remove your education from your resume. I'm only a high school grad so Im kind of in the same position. The moment I started leaving my education off my resume, no one ever asked about it again.


Bingo.

I did the "some college" thing - so no one asks.




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