Originally posted by: josphII
Originally posted by: DaveSimmons
Originally posted by: guyver01
I know when I do interviews... i couldn't give a rats a$$ is you were on the deans list, or participated in "after school activities" .... i just care about your experience, and knowledge... if you can't pass the test i give you on first interview... you have no shot.
But that's after tossing 90% of the resumes away, right? And didn't you look at the GPA when deciding which to keep / toss, or did someone else do the resume screening?
When I was reading resumes before interviewing people for a couple of entry-level software development jobs, GPA was a major factor since most applicants had no work experience.
To all reading this, if
you were trying to decide which of two recent grads to invite in for a job interview, would you pick the 2.9 or the 3.4?
The 2.9 person might even be better for the job, but you don't have time to interview more than a fraction of the applicants, so you have to go with what you can infer from the resume for most of them.
A high GPA tells you that the person has self-discipline and the ability to learn. A low GPA can mean the person only does well when something interests them, and blows off the rest of their work. Since real-world jobs are a mix of interesting and boring work this means many low-GPA people will only do a good job part of the time (for example good coding, lousy documentation and testing).
a high gpa doesnt say jack about ones ability to learn, but it does say a lot about their willingness to conform. There's practically no correlation between how intelligent you are and your gpa, thats just fact. weather or not i had a high gpa didnt mean anything cause i knew just from talking to my peers that i was more intelligent than them. so i didnt turn in a homework assignment or two, so? just because i may have been lazy as far as homework doesnt mean id be lazy on the job. homework and work work are polar opposites. weather or not you 'prove' your intelligence by being a monkey/drone all throughout school and giving 100% effort all the time is completely different. you can throw the gpa out the window as far as im concerned. do you know how many people ive met that think they should be hired just because of their gpa? its ridiculous. for me, the classes i got A's and B's in were the classes i worked smarter, not harder. I coppied homework, obtained past years exams (which are re-used), etc. Does that make me any smarter? does it make me any more knowledgable in that topic than the classes i wasnt able to cut corners and may have ended up w/ a C?
there are many more ways to decipher who would be a good candidate to interview - their level of professionalism, their profile (aka where theyre from, etc). if you have concerns about their work habbits or their intelligence, well, thats what the interview is for! you can tell more about somebody in 5 minutes during an interview than you can by any number of test results. personally i dont put my gpa on my resume because i dont want to be stereotyped by the stigmas associated with low gpa. i give people the credit that after reading my cover letter and reviewing my resume they can tell id be a good employee.
as for your question to whom you would interview - i would exam many other factors before i settled on gpa as the deciding factor as to whom to interview. gpa would be a last resort.
now i dont blame companies for using gpa as a factor for whom to interview becasue frankly its the easy way out and time is money. but to try to justify that method as being the best is just plain silly.