Originally posted by: BigJ
Originally posted by: TechBoyJK
Originally posted by: cw42
I'll have a BS in IT next year, and I was thinking of trying some certs like MCSE. I really don't feel like i've learned to do anything useful in college. Like if someone asked me to perform some kind of task in Win2k3 I prob wouldn't know unless I had some hands-on exp, which I don't get any of in the class.
i have about 12 certs, including A+, network+, MCSA, MCSE, etc.
I get paid alot more than the guys with degrees doing the same job.
And I'm sure there are people with degrees doing a similar job that get paid more than you.
The point is,
when experience is lacking, people will typically value degrees over certs, especially if they're entry level certs.
from someone who has employed people before I will make the points for both
Degree: it tells me someone has taken all around classes like pyschology, math, history, all things that bring wisdom and can pretty much make a person wiser. Going through a four year college can be the experience needed. But if the job requires proficiency in Windows 2003 clusters, your computer science degree isnt much immediate help unless I am ready and have the time to train you.
Certifications: It tells me someone is reasonably proficient at a specific topic. If someone has no experience and a bunch of certs, I have no idea how they will react in a real world situation. Single sitting exams are not the same as full length semester classes. But someone with good experience in their field can seem very valuable if they have the certifications to back up their experience. If the job requires proficiency in Windows 2003 clusters and you have your MCSE 2003 and your elective was HA Clustering, well, that really helps.
The best candidate is someone with both. At my job, the work is most dependent on technical knowledge, so they seem to value certs and experience more than degrees.