Rubber ducking before I even knew what it was

Clara Fitzgerald joined our 12-week tech training course in September 2019. After graduating in Financial Mathematics, Clara went on to apply for jobs in accounting.

Written by Nology Team - 03.12.19

It wasn’t long before she realised that her dream career needed to be something more creative where she could apply all of her skills to create a tangible end product.

That’s when she thought about learning to code…

From 2016 – 2019 I studied Financial Mathematics at Cardiff University. Throughout this, I mostly assumed I’d end up in Finance, taking a particular interest in the Actuarial field. Each year, I went through several application processes for either internships or graduate schemes in Actuarial or Accounting. I took a variety of tests, completing video/telephone interviews and occasionally making it to assessment centres, but never quite getting the roles. The problem here was that my skills weren’t unique, and I was trying to enter a very saturated job market.

Finding the perfect career

In March of 2019, I realised that the reason I couldn’t present the passion I wanted to at interviews for these roles, was because I wasn’t truly excited by them. After years of thinking I wanted to be an Actuary, I realised this wasn’t actually my passion. So I picked up a pen and paper and wrote down all the things that would make up my perfect career. I was looking for a field that was exciting and continuously developing such that there was always more to learn and scope to progress. A role where I could use what I’d learnt in my degree from a Mathematical point of view, but also the skills side – to work analytically and logically, solving problems and consistently challenging my brain. As well as this, I wanted to be creative. I craved an end product to my work that I could see, rather than just being a cog in a machine.

I think I want to code

I sat down with my housemates and said this out loud (rubber ducking before I knew what rubber ducking was) and before they could get a word in, I said: “I think I want to code”.

This was a revolution. I was finally excited by my career opportunities again, which helped me knuckle down and thrive with my uni work – I had an end goal now. The obvious path into this for me was an MSc conversion course in Computer Science. This was going to be expensive and time-consuming, as well as highly theoretical and not tailored to what actual jobs want, but I didn’t think anything without those flaws existed. You can imagine my excitement when I stumbled upon _nology. A course lasting 3 months rather than 12, costing about half of what a Masters would have and teaching actual job-based skills that would genuinely help me get started in tech – wherever within it I wanted to go.

It seemed too good to be true, but it wasn’t. I’m heading into week 7 out of 12 now, and I genuinely feel I’ve learnt more in the last 7 weeks than I did in my final year of University. The course is immersive, exposing you to everything you could expect to encounter starting a role as a Junior Developer, with the freedom to make the mistakes you inevitably will in a safe and supportive environment. The content is continually updated, following industry trends so that _nologists are equipped with all the right languages and frameworks, as well as the tools to learn more in the constantly growing world of tech.

It’s great to hear how _nology has given Clara the opportunity to learn skills that will open up her future job prospects and enable her to pursue a career she is passionate about. Learn more about our 12 week Software Development course.

Posts

Related Stories

Other related articles.

Tech enables you to work in virtually any industry I’ve always had an eclectic mix of interests, with a degree in Liberal Arts & Sciences to back it up....

Read More

November 25, 2019

Working in finance at the time of the credit crunch was pretty scary Obviously working in London and in finance at that time was pretty scary. Ernst and...

Read More

April 3, 2019