Is learning Python "extraordinary"?
Sheila King
usenet at thinkspot.net
Sat Dec 29 20:22:35 EST 2001
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Sat Dec 29 20:22:35 EST 2001
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On Sat, 29 Dec 2001 13:29:35 -0800, "Jesse F. W" <jessefw at loop.com> wrote in comp.lang.python in article <mailman.1009661614.4982.python-list at python.org>: > I am a high school senior, and like many others, I am applying > to college. I am applying to MIT (as well as many other schools). > MIT describes what they are looking for as students who do or have > done "extraordinary things". My question is this, Is teaching myself > Python (with the aid of the Python tutorials and some help from the > various lists) an "extraordinary thing"? How many python-list'ers are > high school students? As a high school teacher of many years, and a former AP Computer Science teacher, I would say that teaching yourself *any* programming language on your own is unusual, although not uncommon. But teaching yourself Python, is rather rare. In writing college admission essays, go ahead and tell about this. More importantly, tell about your motivation for doing it, and any accomplishments that have followed as a result, especially any future plans down the road that your are looking towards as a result of your exposure to Python. -- Sheila King http://www.thinkspot.net/sheila/ http://www.k12groups.org/
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