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healthyboy wrote: » getting low balled on salary because you do not have a degree? is this possible? any experience here?
erpadmin wrote: » Folks that couldn't spell IT figure they can go to some IT cert school, get some certifications and expect a high salary after they graduate. Then you get people who are greatly disappointed when they find out that the job they are gonna get after graduating from a place like PCAge, New Horizons, etc (and most likely went through those schools with unemployment vouchers--you're welcome.
Asif Dasl wrote: » Just out of curiousity - are New Horizons a get-rich-quick place in the US? Here they do IT training and are an exam center in Dublin but from your post it seems they are something different over there? I checked their website and didn't find anything suspect about it - just wondering. I use the exam center and that's about it.
ptilsen wrote: » I still think it will be a valuable experience that will both open more opportunities for me and provide fulfillment. I don't think I'm unique in this respect, which is why I continue recommending IT professionals get college degrees. I think we all need to be getting degrees in business, information technology/systems/assurance/whatever, computer science/engineering/whatever, from reputable schools (be it online, like WGU, or a B&M -- regionally accredited and public are preferred).
ptilsen wrote: » I have not seen a degree impact my salary too much. However, there have been many jobs I've either applied for and not been considered or not applied for due to a four-year degree requirement. Those jobs wouldn't necessarily pay much anymore than I could make elsewhere without that requirement. I can certainly tell you my two-year degree does almost nothing. It might give me an advantage over the guy with no degree, but unless his credentials are otherwise identical it's probably not going to make a difference. The lack of a four-year degree has definitely closed a few doors for me, though. Not so bad earlier in my career, but it makes growth potential much more limited at this point. I'll be pursuing a Bachelor of Computer Science degree from a local brick-and-mortar. A lot of what I learn there won't apply to my career, and a lot will be things I've already learned that I will have to "re-learn" anyway. I still think it will be a valuable experience that will both open more opportunities for me and provide fulfillment. I don't think I'm unique in this respect, which is why I continue recommending IT professionals get college degrees. I think we all need to be getting degrees in business, information technology/systems/assurance/whatever, computer science/engineering/whatever, from reputable schools (be it online, like WGU, or a B&M -- regionally accredited and public are preferred). Really, ERP has a great point: Complaining about the downsides is to no end. Just do it and enjoy the rewards.
RouteThisWay wrote: » Honestly, I thought getting my Associates was enough.
themagicone wrote: » Back in 2007-2008 I was demanding 40k to 50k with no degree, by 2010 the highest offer I could get was 25k to 30k until I got my BS. Now I'm in the 50k to 60k range. Problem is the degrees have be devalued so much.
RouteThisWay wrote: » Honestly, I thought getting my Associates was enough. I have some certs, have about 4 years experience in IT now (almost 2 as a SysAdmin doing everything from T1 HelpDesk, to configuring Firewall policies on Cisco ASA 5505s and Palo Alto-500s, Active Directory redesign, Cisco/HP/Dell/ switch configs, 2 major conversions of VMWare.. one being a 3.5->4.1 upgrade in a FC environment, and the other being a complete Phys -> Virtual environment in iSCSI, managing mixed Red Hat/Windows systems, SQL and Progress DB servers, etc etc etc. Perks for being in a small 3-man shop for 2 100+ employee companies). Needless to say, in the last 2 years my resume has grown significantly. And I still feel that not having a BS is holding me back. I am not actively looking for a job, but I always look to see what is trending out there and always touch base with local recruiters to stay relevant. And more often than not, job postings require degrees. I honestly think it is because of the devaluing of the Bachelor's degree. It is now so common because everyone has one. Where as historically college was for academia, it is now the norm for pretty much any profession/trade you want to get into. Right or wrong is debatable. It doesn't really matter. The simple truth is a degree will never hurt you. Not having one can possibly hurt you. I would say in our field a degree is more likely to get you in the interview process- your experience, personality, and cultural fit will get you the job.
the_Grinch wrote: » I have to agree that the current economic climate dictates the wage you will get more so then your degree. At this point, employers are like people looking to buy a house and have no other debt. It is a buyers market and they can offer out a lot lower salaries to people with degrees, so obviously they might offer less to people without degrees. That being said though, I'm pretty sure most companies have an amount worked into the IT budget that they plan to pay and will pay that amount as long as you meet the skills required for the position. As a side story, we have a family friend who works in the county government. He was speaking to my dad about how he hired two guys to do some system administration/helpdesk level work. I had recently graduated and had there been a posting I would have qualified. So my dad asked why he hadn't mentioned it since they had spoken about how I was looking for a job. He replied that both these guys had been VP's making six figures prior to being laid off and both had families. So the county got two VP's with degrees, experience, and the skillset they wanted for a very good price. Supply and demand....
it_consultant wrote: » No one believes I don't have a degree either. The sad fact is, for me, if I added up all the hours I went to college pursuing my various interests, I would have a few degrees by now .
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