Compare cert salaries and plan your next career move
tleade01 wrote: » I have a associates degree in applied science and was wondering if it is even worth getting a bachelor's degree.
I feel like I learn a lot more on my own and school gives me classes that are not related to IT at all. I feel like I am getting ripped off while I am sitting in a class that has nothing to do with IT.
is it better to take certs or get a degree to get my foot in the networking field?
tleade01 wrote: » Thank you for your responses. I just do not get what history or geography has to do with IT. I learned and took these types of classes all through middle and high school. Maybe I should transfer schools. I am going to look into WGU as it seems like a good fit for me. Did either of you go to WGU? Just want to know your thoughts and opinions about the school and how it works.
tleade01 wrote: » Did either of you go to WGU? Just want to know your thoughts and opinions about the school and how it works.
dt3k wrote: » If you don't have the desire and thirst to spend your every waking moment eating, drinking, and breathing IT then you need to find another profession.
NetworkVeteran wrote: » Western Governor's doesn't offer a CS or EE program. You'll have much more limited job opportunities, a harder time advancing, and often limited pay compared to someone who completes a more challenging degree at a state university or better. A good degree requires effort. There's no right or wrong answer. It's totally up to you.
Everything you've said is actually the opposite for me as well as others on these forums
Also, how would he (or anyone that gets a degree from WGU) "have much more limited job opportunities, a harder time advancing, and often limited pay compared to someone who completes a more challenging degree at a state university or better"?
Come out of the rabbit hole and join the rest of us in the real world.
tleade01 wrote: » So that's why i feel I should drop out of school and feel like I am getting ripped off while I am in these pointless classes like history, geography, and group dynamics.
Patel128 wrote: » I would assume that if even if you are a CCIE, but you write like your 4 or you can't talk to groups of people without freezing up your not retaining jobs all that well.
tleade01 wrote: » I have heard that you do not have to have a degree to be successful in the IT profession. My friend has no degree, no experience in IT, and about 4 or 5 certifications and has an excellent NOC job in Denver making more than double what I make.
tleade01 wrote: » Maybe it is just the area I live in? Maybe need to move out of state? Or did my friend just get really lucky and really is that hard to get out of the help desk job and get into networking?
NetworkVeteran wrote: » Very true! One reason I hold what others call a "high salary range ($140k-$200k)" position--with no travel, security, nor hazard requirements--is because my communication skills were judged superior to those of the CCIEs competing against me. It can sometimes be challenging to explain network technologies, designs, and troubleshooting to non-techies.
Compare salaries for top cybersecurity certifications. Free download for TechExams community.