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tango3065 wrote: » My degree and multiple certs are in Information Technology and IMHO it was a mistake, I love the field and I'm very good at it but the guys in my department with no degrees at all make as much as me but with the lack of education along with much needed core knowledge in the field. I'm currently working on a degree in a different field at the age of 32; The best advise I could give anyone is get a degree in a field that requires a degree or you will be like me and feel screwed. IT/CS is not a professional field in my opinion, if it where it would have educational requirements and not hire someone that is just good at working on PC's, or writing some code that they learned by messing around. If you really want to get a get a degree in IT/CS more power to you and best of luck but just know ahead of time it will might not put you ahead of someone with no college at all. Sorry if this sounds like a rant but I hope that someone getting on here thinking of going for a degree in IT/CS gives it a look.
tango3065 wrote: » I love the field and I'm very good at it but the guys in my department with no degrees at all make as much as me but with the lack of education along with much needed core knowledge in the field.
erpadmin wrote: » You're going to love me then I have (currently) no degree and I make as much as some of my colleagues who has a...[wait for it........] Masters! I'm 33 btw, and I've been in the field for going on 14 years (professionally). Your advice/rant would make sense if you were pursuing a medical or law career. For you to say that IT isn't a professional field because you went to community college, and your colleagues didn't, does not really make much sense. I do have some college though, and that's really what got me employed in the first place, but the last thing I finished with was a high school diploma. Many jobs I have seen will allow you to substitute education for work experience...something I'm very familiar with. However, I've reached the glass ceiling at this level, and I'm trying to see IT management. I plan on getting not only getting a BS (in IT... ) but I will top that off with a Masters (either in Management or BA with an IT management component). If I can't use that to get myself promoted, I can definitely use it to adjunct teach after my day job and into retirement. In any event, I feel and fear that your rant/advice is a tiny bit misguided. Not everything is so black and white...
cisco_certs wrote: » I dont know about your state but the jobs (monster/dice/careerbuilder) here in California most of the time says "bachelors required" and then "X certs required".
NinjaBoy wrote: » IMO, the problem isn't with the degree themselves - it's with the Profession as it stands. Unlike other more established professions (eg Engineering, Nursing, Law, etc), IT is more or less unregulated. Anyone can play around with computers at home and call themselves an "IT Professional". In fact I've seen organisations stick people in the IT department, when they couldn't get rid of them just because they can use a PC.
tango3065 wrote: » If you really want to get a get a degree in IT/CS more power to you and best of luck but just know ahead of time it will might not put you ahead of someone with no college at all. Sorry if this sounds like a rant but I hope that someone getting on here thinking of going for a degree in IT/CS gives it a look.
erpadmin wrote: » This isn't the 90's anymore where that would have been true. Experience now separates the PC Hobbyist from the IT Professional. In that same vein, someone who merely graduates from a degree-granting institution with no experience can't call themselves an IT Professional either...
erpadmin wrote: » ...I have always stated, from the beginning, that a IT Professional has to have IT experience that can be quantified with a resume (or in your case a CV).
NinjaBoy wrote: » The '90's? Mate I'm talking about now. The amount of time my team and I have had to be hired into other organisations to clean up the mess that "experienced IT Pro's" with X amount of year experience left behind. What happens to them? They move on, change their company name, move area, change employers, etc... So basically nothing. I've taught MCSA/MCSE 2003 classes to experienced IT Professionals where I've come across a couple that couldn't join a XP client to a domain (even though they had their MCSA & MCSE 2000). ... Unlike the title/term engineer (or Eurling), the term "IT Professional" is not protected under law (no matter what country your in), so anyone can use that title/term.
NinjaBoy wrote: » Would a person who has an IT related degree in his/her first week of his/her first IT job (eg helpdesk logging jobs) be classed as an IT Professional?
tango3065 wrote: » Experience will be taken in place of education on a year for year basis sound familiar to anyone in the field? Yeah a four or even 6 year degree will get you working with non college graduates making the same amount.
erpadmin wrote: » I've looked at state jobs in Cali, as a matter of fact as many higher ed schools in the UC system are PeopleSoft shops. Same deal; I can mix education with work experience if I had a desire to go out West. If I were to work for Oracle itself though (which, incidently, hires WGU grads since they're a partner with them), then the BS I'm working on would help...but I don't forsee that happening. I would imagine the same is true for Network Admin/Engineering jobs for those wanting to pursue the Cisco route. [Pun intended]
cisco_certs wrote: » NP, Im open minded. there's always an exception and with yours, years of experience, you are the exception. The debate here is if joe has 5 years of experience in peoplesoft + degree VS bill that has 5 years experience in peoplesoft without a degree. I think the one with the degree will get the edge.
WilliamK99 wrote: » having no degree is better than an Associates....
WilliamK99 wrote: » Not to be mean, but an Associate's isn't really a degree... Most employers look down on an AA.... You need a Bachelor's minimum to be taken seriously. IMO, having no degree is better than an Associates....
erpadmin wrote: » Personally, I didn't need to be an MCP to do any of those (many of us didn't)...
erpadmin wrote: » I'm very familiar with your country's guilds and how Engineer and Architect are legally protected terms, which is why I can never become an MCSE (unless I spend time I do not have on obtaining the MCSE 2003).
erpadmin wrote: » ...While experience is relevant to be called an IT professional, it's up to the interviewer to see/know what's up with a candidate. If someone with 3+ years can't do the most basic of tasks, well it is obvious what needs to be done.
erpadmin wrote: » Of course not. I don't know how it is in cricket, rugby or even soccer (I said soccer, not "football"), but most professionals I know (in sports or otherwise) become professionals/veterans after a year and lose their rookie status. One week just won't fly.
xenodamus wrote: » Could you elaborate? I don't take offense, because I have enough years of experience that my AAS is a moot point in my career now. But I can't think of any situation where this statement would be true. Maybe it's different in the States, but what you're telling me is that given two candidates with equal experience and aptitude, having an Associates degree puts you at a DISADVANTAGE when compared to those without one. You believe employers would count a 2 year degree as a strike against applicants and throw them out in favor of equal candidates with no degree? After 8 years and 3 employers in IT, I can tell you that I've never thought to myself, "Man...if only I didn't have a degree I might have gotten that job."
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