Apple CEO Tim Cook believes learning to code might be more important that perfecting your English.
However, he doesn't believe you necessarily need to learn by taking a course on it. He reiterated once more this week, that a college degree isn't necessary to be a developer.
Earlier this week, Cook was visiting an Apple store in Florida to meet with a 16-year-old scholarship winner who will be attending Apple's annual Worldwide Developers Conference next month. He told TechCrunch that it's impressive how accomplished the kid, Liam Rosenfeld, is with coding at such a young age. According to him, that's a perfect example of what he's said time and again.
"I don't think a four year degree is necessary to be proficient at coding" Cook said. "I think that's an old, traditional view. What we found out is that if we can get coding in in the early grades and have a progression of difficulty over the tenure of somebody's high school years, by the time you graduate kids like Liam, as an example of this, they're already writing apps that could be put on the App Store."
Tim Cook and Lioam Rosenfeld? -TechCrunch
That's not the only thing Cook thinks is outdated. He points out how businesses haven't yet embraced all the technological advances of the industry yet and for years "haven't changed a whole lot".
"I think what it is is they haven't embraced mobility," Cook said. "They haven't embraced machine learning. They haven't embraced AR. All of this stuff is a bit foreign in some way. They're still fixing employees to a desk. That's not the modern workplace.