Surely you should only train for something in which you have an interest in. If you simply pick a course based upon some vain hope that it will be a good qualification to have, you will surely end up unfullfilled etc at the end of the day. Follow your gut feeling and go for what you are interested in.
The German IT professionals I have dealt with have had the apprentice type background rather than a more rounded university education. In many cases I have founded them very one-dimensional, hide-bound and unimaginative. I suppose it depends on the discipline. I prefer the more general Irish education.since so many of their engineers come from a trade background you will be in good company. When/if you come back here you will see how second rate so many Irish engineers really are (not all but most).
The advantage of being a native english speaker there is that nearly all regulatory documents are written in english.
They generally do their university education after their vocational training. This gives them a practical understanding of their sector before they get the broader training.The German IT professionals I have dealt with have had the apprentice type background rather than a more rounded university education. In many cases I have founded them very one-dimensional, hide-bound and unimaginative. I suppose it depends on the discipline. I prefer the more general Irish education.
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