Originally posted by: rh71
Can't get this job without a bachelors... they required a 4-year degree at minimum... made me prove it with a registrar's sealed envelope and all...
I guess they didn't like people who take shortcuts. Either that or to prove you can finish what you start.
Originally posted by: sash1
no degree > *
Originally posted by: halik
Honestly education is one of the handful things that you shouldn't start by aiming low... you're only fvck yourself in the end. I've got a double BS from a top 10 university and it's WELL worth the money - if you go to a reputable schools, all kinds of doors will open for you.
Plus keep in mind that especially in the IT field, you're facing global competition... Your 2 years or bulsh!t community college will be no contest to guys coming from India Institute of Technology engineering programs.
Originally posted by: Aimster
In the computer field .. degrees can be worthless.
I know people with no degrees in the computer business making 100K+
Originally posted by: halik
Honestly education is one of the handful things that you shouldn't start by aiming low... you're only fvck yourself in the end. I've got a double BS from a top 10 university and it's WELL worth the money - if you go to a reputable schools, all kinds of doors will open for you.
Plus keep in mind that especially in the IT field, you're facing global competition... Your 2 years or bulsh!t community college will be no contest to guys coming from India Institute of Technology engineering programs.
Originally posted by: ViviTheMage
first ive heard of this.
Originally posted by: ViviTheMage
Originally posted by: Fraggable
I've been told by a few people who have nothing to gain by misinforming me that an AA with 1+ years of experience will almost always beat a BA/BS with no experience. Where you really win is with an AA with co-op experience. That's what I'm doing now. And I am in the IT field - network admin.
If you can get real experience in the IT field while getting an AA, go for it and be confident. By real experience I mean something other than phone help desk. I got to completely skip that step because I had enough experience on my own to land an admin position right away.
I currently am a IT Assistant, but when I got hired the IT Manager died , we support 100+ PCs and it was up to me to do it all until we hired another IT assistant to help out, my title is an IT assistant, but I consider it as an IT Manager, im not getting that pay, but I definatly have that workload.
I do want my bachelors, just because I have heard it will raise the roof in what jobs I can and cant get, even when I look on monster.com for jobs they all say have your Bachelors if not , have 5+ years experience.
and by high paying I do say 65k ++.
I also want to skip the phone help desk crap, I have heard it is just horrible.
Originally posted by: Descartes
Originally posted by: halik
Honestly education is one of the handful things that you shouldn't start by aiming low... you're only fvck yourself in the end. I've got a double BS from a top 10 university and it's WELL worth the money - if you go to a reputable schools, all kinds of doors will open for you.
Out of curiosity, what doors has a double BS opened for you?
Plus keep in mind that especially in the IT field, you're facing global competition... Your 2 years or bulsh!t community college will be no contest to guys coming from India Institute of Technology engineering programs.
IIT is a great program, but that's like saying you can't compete in this industry because of those coming from MIT. It's a silly argument. The suggestion that coming from IIT automatically means you can't be competitive is also silly.
You sound more like an elitist than anything else. Hope that's working out for you.
Plus keep in mind that especially in the IT field, you're facing global competition... Your 2 years or bulsh!t community college will be no contest to guys coming from India Institute of Technology engineering programs.
This month, at Career Fair at my university, there were 290 companies interested in various engineers
Originally posted by: halik
Thats comple bs (no pun intended), your resume will get tossed out in the first round. Why sould we pick you when theres many, many other candidates with real degrees.
Originally posted by: gsellis
But 10 years from graduation, it will be BS+9 > AA+11 (where AA may get resume dropped for app pool by HR handling the resumes).
Originally posted by: BigJ
BS/BA is what gets you in the door. Everything else after that is up to you.
However, experience can easily make up the difference b/w a BS/BA and an AA.
Originally posted by: spike spiegal
This month, at Career Fair at my university, there were 290 companies interested in various engineers
"Various" engineers include electrical, chemical, mechanical, and so on. A chemical engineer for instance would have to have much greater formal education than a 'Network Engineer'.
As a 'Network Engineer', does that mean you physically design the IC's on network cards and geometries of network cables used in the building? No?
Companies that insist on higher degrees for IT related fields are only trying to filter candidates because HR has gun to their head. Of those 290 companies 270 will be backfilling those positions in a few years with contractors and out-source services and never inquiring as to degreed applicants.
Originally posted by: Descartes
Forget this ceiling nonsense. There is NO artificial ceiling in this industry, and if you want me to prove that 3,000 ways I can do so. If there were I would have hit it long time ago.
The ceiling is your potential. If you're good, you'll excel; if not, you'll always be limited. Experience is absolutely what matters, and the quality of the experience is paramount. Diversify your knowledge portfolio, seek challenging projects every single time, and make sure you continually progress in your abilities both technically and especially socially. This business is about how you can play the game, and understanding the social dynamic is what artificially limits probably 80% of all of those in IT. Understand it, play it, use it... and you'll find there's no ceiling.
Originally posted by: 91TTZ
For those of you that have worked in the field for a number of years, you'll see that not everyone is equal, and that the cream of the crop quickly rises to the top, regardless of where they went to school.
