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Capozz24 wrote: » I have a degree in Management Information Systems, and at my school they lacked a lot on the IT aspect of it(because half the program is about business). Please don't go down this route unless you've seen people from the actual program get jobs. Go down the Computer Science/whatever specialist route. I've been trying to make up for my lack of specialty knowledge by going for certifications, and am about to take the Network+ which I hope I can pass. However, I know I'm going to start in a help desk role and then hopefully within a fair amount of time transition into a jr. system admin or higher role. The good thing about IT is there are certifications to help you go down a specific path. For me, 2 months out of school, I've been taking what I thought was the fast-track route to getting pretty much any job in IT by trying to get basic IT certifications(such as the A+) since my degree is frustratingly generalistic. However, it was my choice. I picked it specifically because it was easier than computer science(haha). I'll work hard, and try to make it as a network admin somewhere eventually. However, if I can't find a niche I enjoy in the industry, then I might just go back to graduate school for something like Educational Psychology(it interests me, and I was involved with these people in high school.) Sorry, I just noticed I rambled. I will understand if you put tldr.
the_Grinch wrote: » From personal experience I can tell you to go with the general degree and minor/concentrate in an area of interest (if that's possible). My degree is in Security and I had a heck of a time getting employers to look past it when applying for jobs. I had all the foundation courses of an IS degree, but then a ton of security coursework and got passed over for entry level jobs. I had some experience, but each time I'd get "this isn't a security related job you'll be bored" or "there's no way to move to the security team from this position". When you're starting out you don't care what you're doing when you have bills to pay. Now, in contrast, I had a friend who majored in Computer Science and then concentrated in Network Security along with System Administration. Got a job right out of school and then moved into security as a contractor a year later. The other side of it is you think you know what you want to do in college, but things change. A specialty can limit you when you find out you have more of a knack for systems administration then you do for network administration. Plus, in security, it's about experience. How can you secure a technology when you have no experience setting it up? Save the specialization for certifications and a Masters/certificate. Took me four years of full time work to finally move into security and looking back I'm glad it took me that long. There are so many avenues in IT that college just can't teach you them all. My time at an MSP let me touch on each and every specialty, from there I was able to decide what was best for me.
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