Is it worth staying in school? I'm in my 30s, have no degree (well, an AAS in an unrelated field) but have become semi-proficient at programming in the past year or so in which I've pursued this career.
I started back to school last fall, and continued through the spring as a part-time student. I decided that this fall I would go full-time, in addition to my full-time job programming in the energy sector.
However, I've lost almost all my passion and drive for learning new things. I don't study new languages anymore, or read blogs, or write blog posts myself anymore. All the time I used to spend enriching myself I now spend doing Geology homework (a science elective..) or taking Computing II. I am taking Discrete Math, and that's interesting and applicable down the road. But I'm left wondering, is it worth it to have, in my early- to mid-thirties, what will likely be 3-4 completely unproductive years? I feel like instead of constantly improving myself at my own pace, I've slammed the brakes on my education by going to college.
All that being said, I want to continue to be employable. I live in a midwestern city, a big one, but not one that is heavily tech-centric. The crunch for developers is very severe here, so I don't take the fact I find work relatively easily as a sign that I'm some super programmer, or that I'm universally hireable.
I just want to know the opinion of those more experienced than me. Is it worth it to stay in college? Or is that parchment more worthwhile than continuing to pursue programming as the passion it is for me?
Education (and by that I mean the official, credential-providing type of education) is an investment. Yes, some less productive years are a given. But if you do it right, your earning potential will be higher, you'll be able to work on more interesting and challenging problems, and you'll give yourself more career options. There are certain problem domains that it'd be very difficult to break into without a guide to get you started in the right direction.
With that said, it really depends on what you want to do for the rest of your life. If you don't have any specific career goals, either find some or drop out, because it's a bad investment and you'll waste time and money. If you want to make simple web apps for a living and you're sure that's all you'll ever want to do, drop out, because you can learn that easily on your own. College is definitely not worthless - you just need to figure out what it's worth to you.
My advice: look around for professors solving problems you find interesting, and make contact with them and see if they'd be willing to work with you. Try to find work that really stimulates you, and do that.