Originally posted by: fritolays
Originally posted by: 2Xtreme21
"I felt real world experience is far more important for a field such as this. Anyone can take classes, memorize some stuff from a book, and spit it back out again come exam time, but when push comes to shove, I'll actually be able to use that knowledge to further benefit this company."
sweet.. I'm going to say something along this line in response for my other interviews
Originally posted by: dmcowen674
Originally posted by: randay
"why is it so low?".
shake thier hand, thank them for thier time, and walk out the door.
Amen
Originally posted by: fritolays
As soon as I step in, I get asked "what are your strengths"
then he asks for my GPA
I tell them... he says, why is it so low? (my gpa is slightly over a 3.0)
He says everyone that works here has "nearly a 4.0 perfect gpa" :roll:
The interview continued on in this fashion.. and I felt like I was being grilled the whole time
It's for a technical position.. I just want a part time job doing data analysis
They said they'll need to think about it and let me know next week
Originally posted by: magomago
That is weird- I've never had an interview where they glanced at my GPA for more than a split second...and then they never bothered to bring it up. I do have a relatively decent GPA, and it seems like it gets overlooked so much and instead they grill me how I don't have technical experience - and in the end give me a job that isn't technical (which makes getting another technical job even HARDER because then then they say "well your experience is clearly non technical...so you don't have much "real engineering experience")
Originally posted by: Imp
Originally posted by: magomago
That is weird- I've never had an interview where they glanced at my GPA for more than a split second...and then they never bothered to bring it up. I do have a relatively decent GPA, and it seems like it gets overlooked so much and instead they grill me how I don't have technical experience - and in the end give me a job that isn't technical (which makes getting another technical job even HARDER because then then they say "well your experience is clearly non technical...so you don't have much "real engineering experience")
Ha... I've been to an intern interview like that. The job description was pulling/scanning and printing AutoCAD files yet they kept emphasizing that it was a "technical" job. Granted, it took me an entire semester to learn CAD, and 2 more to practice using it... and 5 minutes to print. However, it took 3 years of learning and practice to "master" Word and Excel, but that's considered garbage, highschool level skills.
Originally posted by: 2Xtreme21
"I felt real world experience is far more important for a field such as this. Anyone can take classes, memorize some stuff from a book, and spit it back out again come exam time, but when push comes to shove, I'll actually be able to use that knowledge to further benefit this company."
Originally posted by: oogabooga
I always want to say something to the extent of "I never let getting good grades get in the way of my education" but it seems to canned and unbelievable.
I hate that during college I made no effort to get out of difficult classes or hard professors or difficult classes taught by hard professors and stuck through it. There is no way to prove that a B in some upper level course with this professor is worth more than the hand out A's to everyone who 'signed in' for attendance with some other professor. Sucks to me for not working the system.