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No best answer has yet been selected by misslideaway. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I love computers too and want to work with them. I can go into lots of different jobs that let me use computers. This should not lead one to study computing. Computing is basically mostly PROGRAMMING, which in my opinion and experience is a very refined art to which few people are suited.
I dont think short courses like the MS one are a good idea. Go for a degree or HNC. Leaves more flexibility.
I did Computing A-Level and it is NOT just programming. It teaches structured approaches to problem solving, lower level workings of compression, the workings of hardware (like HDD) and project management. It has a very broad syllabus and has put me in good stead for the job market. Its only drawback is the academic side I suppose (which is fine for me, I'm that sort of person).
MCSE is all good and well but it concentrates purely on MS solutions which the real world can do without quite frankly. If all he wants to do is work with Microsoft then fair enough, but I think a broader understanding of computing is needed in the IT industry as opposed to 'How do you change your computer to use a static IP instead of DHCP' type approach that MCSE affords.
If he's thinking of Uni then A-Level would be better too.
I would suggest doing science based A levels, and maths, computing would be good too, but he should go for a degree or HNC\D.
The Microsoft qualifications are fine for when you have left school and made bad choices, but for someone young enough to do it properly there is no point in tieing yourself to Microsoft products.
Also programming courses in C++ would be good. I know it is not the only programming language out there, but it is a very powerful and serious one, respected and if you learn it it gives you a good standing to learning any other language. Don't take the easy route and do VB.
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