Computer science education in Bolivia is in a worryingly underdeveloped state, and this point deserves to be emphasized. While in other countries the teaching of programming, robotics, and computational thinking has become an essential part of the school curriculum from an early age, in Bolivia a limited approach still predominates, focused on the basic use of office software and with little integration of computer science as a formative discipline. on this at UPEA
>>108561821no bueno.
>>108561821>Basic use of office softwareThen it's by definition not computer science. Hell, if you do not have a class on algorithms, data structures, and complexity theory, then it is like having a physics curriculum without studying gravity.
>>108562073>by definition not computer scienceIn my university, computer science means CAD, electronics, electricity and programming,At least we program something and then document it in LaTeX (we need to learn it ourselfs).
>>108561821>still predominates, focused on the basic use of office softwareGood. Zoomers need help to do even that.
>>108561821Looks like the average third world lesson on computers. They don't even teach robotics here. I mean, nobody can afford an 8-bit hobbyist microcontroller here.
Nevermind, yours are on the mediocre side.
>>108561821>Labia-PC03
>>108561821>other countries the teaching of programming, robotics, and computational thinking has become an essential part of the school curriculum from an early ageThis is not true. The US has trouble producing people who are literate. If you ever encounter programming, robotics, etc before undergrad, it will be a small number nerdy white and Asian highschoolers. Even this is socially discouraged by other students and sexual selection. Join robotics and AP classes, be lonely and have no prom date, or join football and weightlifting and have sex with every cheerleader at least once.The whole culture here is built around discouraging intelligence and rewarding stupidity. This is unironically why the US is falling behind in tech/science/math.
>>108561821You'll just use Argentine colleges like you always do.