I found this message on a list, talking about ITT's ISS degree. I am interested in knowing if you all agree that subject matter outside of the degree scope is truly worthwhile.
SecurityFocus BASICS: Re: ITT a good ISS school to attend?
"Curtis,
I think it's great that you already have a career in mind. And ITT may
be a good start. But I would recommend getting a well rounded
education. I am not familiar enough with ITT to critique their
programs. I can only go on what I've heard. And I've heard it is more
like a vocational school for IT.
I believe it is more important to learn why than how. If ITT programs
focus on how to accomplish specific tasks, that is extremely perishable
knowledge. If you study things like english, history, math, and ethics
you will gain knowledge that should last you a lifetime. I'm not saying
you should major in english, but that non-technical subjects should not
be neglected. Later in your career you will garner as much respect for
how well you present yourself as how much you know about IT.
If you had gone to ITT fifteen years ago and majored in Novell
Administration, what would your career prospects look like today? IT is
ever changing and I believe the key is to be versatile.
I think a better combination would be an IT degree from a traditional
school with security certs afterwards."
Personally, I am a fan of concentrations in degree's. I think this is one of the reasons college grads are having such a hard time, and will continue to have a hard time getting employed in the future. They may know some theory, and know the why, but they haven't DONE it, they don't know HOW to do it.
The poster makes a good point, that a degree in for instance programming or novell, can certainly hold you back when looking to change career path's or when a technology is no longer supported. However I would counter that it simply requires more work. You get a Microsoft cert to show that you know that as well, or you get a certificate in hardware repair, or even a masters in a different concentration.
However, that is not really the point, I think these advanced math, english, history courses are unnecessary. You take 12 years of english and math and history, I don't see why a IT professional needs to know calculus, or whatever else they teach in college courses these days. Can they be useful? Yes, but I don't think it should be required learning.