Originally posted by: slydecix
drop the profile
Originally posted by: RagingBITCH
This site has been shut down due to terms of use violations
The owner of the credit card used to purchase Premium services for this Xanga account has filed a complaint of *credit card fraud*. We have notified the authorities, refunded the credit card owner and terminated the account. A full investigation is currently under way.
That would look GREAT on your resume.
Originally posted by: FlyLice
Originally posted by: Azurik
Originally posted by: FlyLice
You forgot your college GPA.
I haven't graduated yet (May 2005). I plan on adding it when I know it.
You can still put what you have so far. Like 1 semester is going to change your gpa.
Resume with no GPA = employers assume < 3.0 or "C" avg.
Originally posted by: sygyzy
I only graduated a few years ago and I don't post my GPA. Should have no ill effects. If an employer will give up the opportunity to hire a quality person based on GPA, then they are making a grave mistake. Or could be at least.
Originally posted by: flamingelephant
I have never met an employer who gave and flying rat f#ck about a gpa. Your grades in college/university have little relation to how you perform in a job. When I was hiring people I didn't care about gpa, because its irrelevant. I found people with high gpa to have less than average social, teamworking, life skills and common sense. So much about school now is just learing to write the test, and that kind of knowledge has little practical use in the real world.
Originally posted by: richardycc
Originally posted by: flamingelephant
I have never met an employer who gave and flying rat f#ck about a gpa. Your grades in college/university have little relation to how you perform in a job. When I was hiring people I didn't care about gpa, because its irrelevant. I found people with high gpa to have less than average social, teamworking, life skills and common sense. So much about school now is just learing to write the test, and that kind of knowledge has little practical use in the real world.
you are so wrong, a lot of old school (blue chip)companies actually have policy for the mininum GPA a person has to have before they hire them. if you want to work for a small mom and pop company, yes, GPA isn't as important, but if you want to work at any top company, GPA is VERY important. they will hire a braindead person with a 4.0 than someone who is streetsmart with an avg GPA.
Originally posted by: richardycc
Originally posted by: flamingelephant
I have never met an employer who gave and flying rat f#ck about a gpa. Your grades in college/university have little relation to how you perform in a job. When I was hiring people I didn't care about gpa, because its irrelevant. I found people with high gpa to have less than average social, teamworking, life skills and common sense. So much about school now is just learing to write the test, and that kind of knowledge has little practical use in the real world.
you are so wrong, a lot of old school (blue chip)companies actually have policy for the mininum GPA a person has to have before they hire them. if you want to work for a small mom and pop company, yes, GPA isn't as important, but if you want to work at any top company, GPA is VERY important. they will hire a braindead person with a 4.0 than someone who is streetsmart with an avg GPA.
Originally posted by: flamingelephant
Originally posted by: richardycc
Originally posted by: flamingelephant
I have never met an employer who gave and flying rat f#ck about a gpa. Your grades in college/university have little relation to how you perform in a job. When I was hiring people I didn't care about gpa, because its irrelevant. I found people with high gpa to have less than average social, teamworking, life skills and common sense. So much about school now is just learing to write the test, and that kind of knowledge has little practical use in the real world.
you are so wrong, a lot of old school (blue chip)companies actually have policy for the mininum GPA a person has to have before they hire them. if you want to work for a small mom and pop company, yes, GPA isn't as important, but if you want to work at any top company, GPA is VERY important. they will hire a braindead person with a 4.0 than someone who is streetsmart with an avg GPA.
Guess its their fault if they want a braindead socially functionless person with a 4.0 gpa. Performance based interviewing.... thats where all HR and evaluation should go. to me, gpa does not equal potential good performance, not by a longshot! So many better ways of evaluating people than answering questions on a test that have no bearing on application of the knowledge
Originally posted by: richardycc
Originally posted by: flamingelephant
I have never met an employer who gave and flying rat f#ck about a gpa. Your grades in college/university have little relation to how you perform in a job. When I was hiring people I didn't care about gpa, because its irrelevant. I found people with high gpa to have less than average social, teamworking, life skills and common sense. So much about school now is just learing to write the test, and that kind of knowledge has little practical use in the real world.
you are so wrong, a lot of old school (blue chip)companies actually have policy for the mininum GPA a person has to have before they hire them. if you want to work for a small mom and pop company, yes, GPA isn't as important, but if you want to work at any top company, GPA is VERY important. they will hire a braindead person with a 4.0 than someone who is streetsmart with an avg GPA.
Minimum was 3.0 GPA for a big corporation, bigger than M$. They wanted a 4-year degree too. Otherwise, it was mostly based on your job experience.. not how you did in school.Originally posted by: AgentEL
Originally posted by: richardycc
Originally posted by: flamingelephant
I have never met an employer who gave and flying rat f#ck about a gpa. Your grades in college/university have little relation to how you perform in a job. When I was hiring people I didn't care about gpa, because its irrelevant. I found people with high gpa to have less than average social, teamworking, life skills and common sense. So much about school now is just learing to write the test, and that kind of knowledge has little practical use in the real world.
you are so wrong, a lot of old school (blue chip)companies actually have policy for the mininum GPA a person has to have before they hire them. if you want to work for a small mom and pop company, yes, GPA isn't as important, but if you want to work at any top company, GPA is VERY important. they will hire a braindead person with a 4.0 than someone who is streetsmart with an avg GPA.
That was my impression as well. One exception: Microsoft
keep it if it fits on 1 page.Originally posted by: Azurik
It was suggested over at FW to dump the internship part, as the other two jobs trump the internship's experience. Thoughts?
