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lordy wrote: » You are working on a cert, it's called your Diploma Take it easy, I don't think it makes much sense to work on certs if you cannot put their knowledge and value to work. I didn't get my first cert until I was 25 so there is absolutely no hurry, believe me.
Armymanis wrote: » I most likely wont be graduating until I am 23 or 24. My goal is to become a system admin by the time I am 50. AND NO I WILL NOT BE WORKING SO DON'T EVEN SUGGEST IT! .
LucasMN wrote: » In 26 or 27 years I don't even know if there will be such a thing as a system admin. That is a loooong time in the technical world. Shoot for getting a higher level job by the time you are 26-30. You make me laugh when you say you can't work and go to school at the same time. But, each to his own.
Armymanis wrote: » I would be more apt to finish the cert, but the main problem is would it still be current when i graduate in 2-3 years? I most likely wont be graduating until I am 23 or 24.
Armymanis wrote: » Ok, I am just really enthusastic about IT and want to get very far ahead and do not want to be stuck. It has been a real pleasure doing this 4 month contract job because I've learned a lot about the different types of HP hardware. I just need to work on school and get it done.
mattlee09 wrote: » Definitely, haha. As far as school, it'll come in time, no way around that. If your still anxious, you can certainly focus that enthusiasm and concentrate on practical knowledge (either through certs or just following a certs path) or meeting with others that share your passion. Last year I had a high school student interested in IT 'shadow' me for a day for his career day, so you could always look at doing something like that, or just volunteering your time to assist with things in return for the key experience you'd receive.
Armymanis wrote: » yeah i've done 6 months of IT volunteer experience. Since it was required for my degree to work in a computer lab, I actually paid $1000 to get 6 months of volunteer experience fixing broken desktops, replacing hardware, and installing and configuring operating systems like Windows XP, Vista, 7, and Windows Server 2008. I am wondering if programming is what I am looking for. Can you still go into programming even after you have gotten an IT degree, even though it is not computer science? I plan on gettinga bachelors in Information Technology and administrative management. I know I may want to be a manager of something one day. But right now I am trying to decide what to do.
mattlee09 wrote: » Of course, anything is possible However, I think it would be difficult to compete for entry-level programming jobs against those with CS degrees, especially depending on your location. And depending on which languages you know/learn/specialize in. I'm sure someone else can elaborate much more than myself in regards to programming.
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