I definitely agree with Steven. I was lucky enough to discover Ruby + Rails via 
a friend and ended up doing freelance and contract work while I was at Uni, but 
many other students aren't in the same boat. Either they never find out about 
the community (does Ruby AU do outreach to universities?) or they don't have 
the time (can you imagine learning Ruby on Rails on the side while also writing 
an Honours thesis and working weekends to cover your expenses?). Big companies 
are very visible and they have obvious grad programs that are easy to sign up 
to.

Some of the best CS students I know have ended up in graduate roles at Banks 
and Consultancy firms. Many of them would love to transition to Ruby on Rails 
work, or Django work, or iOS dev or just about anything that doesn't involve 
three meetings a day and a slew of bland work. But the community just doesn't 
seem to want them. The silly bit is that for many of them getting productive in 
a new language isn't a big deal.

As the others have said, graduate or intern programs could definitely help your 
business (and give back to the community!)

- Ben


On Friday, 3 May 2013 at 5:02 PM, Steven Farlie wrote:

> My anecdotal experience (as a volunteer coach/organiser in OpenTechSchool) is 
> that the talent base for junior programmers is incredibly broad but it is 
> there. There are people with programming knowledge but not domain knowledge 
> (e.g. Python but not web), or domain knowledge without the platform (web but 
> not specifically Ruby/Rails is very common). Lots of people from the sciences 
> (there are no jobs in science!). Aside from the lucky few who fell into the 
> scene outside of their studies they simply don't know where to go. Others go 
> through private courses like Sydney Dev Camp or App Academy. I know there is 
> a supply of raw talent, but it is difficult for employers to find. Not to 
> mention the problem of evaluating. Picking a good hire is a lottery at the 
> best of times.
> 
> If anyone is musing about opening a junior role I would encourage it. It can 
> be immensely rewarding both for the dev and the team. Think of all those bad 
> habits they would never even have the chance to learn! 
> -- 
> Steven
> 
> 
> 
> On 3 May 2013 14:56, Michael Pearson <mipear...@gmail.com 
> (mailto:mipear...@gmail.com)> wrote:
> > This isn't consistent with my most recent experiences recruiting: we 
> > advertised at all levels, and received very few applications from junior 
> > developers. You're welcome to search the list and find the job ad I posted.
> > 
> > At the time, we were looking specifically at both ends of the spectrum: 
> > either somebody shit hot to help teach us some cool new tricks (which is 
> > what we got, in the end) or somebody fresh that who could bring in some 
> > optimism and take some of the load off while we worked out how to fix 
> > everything. 
> > 
> > It's also possible that I, being the one who posted the ad, was being 
> > deliberately exclusionary: I only wanted juniors to apply via the mailing 
> > list rather than via recruiters or seek. I wanted somebody who was keen 
> > enough about Ruby to be part of the community (or at least be aware that it 
> > exists), rather than somebody who's just graduated a Java-heavy CS degree 
> > and will now latch on to anything that will help them make rent this month. 
> > 
> > So it's possible that we're not hostile towards juniors - but possibly 
> > we're doubtful of juniors put forward via recruiters, thanks to being 
> > burned before by resume-fiddling and other such nasty things. 
> > 
> > Also - do these several amazing juniors have github accounts, or other 
> > proof of capability? Are they on this list (at least filtered for anything 
> > with [JOB] in the title)? 
> > 
> > 
> > On Fri, May 3, 2013 at 2:26 PM, Ashley Pettit <is_ash_is_g...@hotmail.com 
> > (mailto:is_ash_is_g...@hotmail.com)> wrote:
> > > Hi Guys,
> > > 
> > > I've noticed a bit of a problem with the ruby community and I wanted to 
> > > voice my concerns.  
> > > 
> > > Firstly let me say the ruby community is great. Full of passionate people 
> > > who love what they do and 9 times out of 10 something built in ruby is 
> > > better than something not purely because the developers are so passionate 
> > > about creating awesome products. 
> > > 
> > > So where's the problem?
> > > 
> > > Ruby is a language which has been embraced by start-ups and small-medium 
> > > sized businesses. It's not something the larger companies have taken to. 
> > > 
> > > Why is this a problem?
> > > 
> > > Small-medium business do not have the time to train juniors. They want 
> > > people who are already great. They release jobs where there is an 
> > > immediate requirement. They don't hire just because there is misc 
> > > development to be done. They hire for a specific project or specific set 
> > > of work. With other languages like .NET, junior developers are able to 
> > > get experience with larger companies who run graduate programs and who 
> > > can afford to train people for future rewards. With Ruby however, this is 
> > > not the case. 
> > > 
> > > Again why is this a problem?
> > > 
> > > No company that I know is currently running ruby graduate programs, 
> > > no-one is hiring talented juniors and no-one is investing in developing 
> > > people's potential. Many really talented junior developers with < 12 
> > > months experience are being left out in the cold unable to find work and 
> > > are forced to learn a language like .NET because they can't find ruby 
> > > work. I personally know of at least several great junior Rubists who have 
> > > so much potential yet no company will hire them as they don't have the 
> > > magical 2+ years experience to be considered a "Mid-level developer". 
> > > 
> > > I personally think that the ruby community (especially employers) needs 
> > > to support junior rubists a little more or the community will simply 
> > > stagnate.  
> > > 
> > > -- 
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> > >  
> > >  
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > -- 
> > Michael Pearson
> > 
> > -- 
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> >  
> >  
> 
> -- 
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