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EdTheLad wrote: » The problem with techie work its its very black and white, it doesn't take long to work out someone is useless, other fields can be grey and the under performing college graduate can hide his incompetence.
jaycrewz wrote: » EdtheLad, How can someone bash a degree, when studying for a certification is similar? (at least in my eyes it is). As you said, people getting certs are learning to learn.
EdTheLad wrote: » cert dumping
nster wrote: » There are several reasons why it looks less necessary for us techies: - 4 years is a long time, you can easily study and practice for high end certifications, get some work experience (which has more of an influence than a degree) - ROI is not as good in terms of salary (assuming 80K uni debt + 4x 40K of salary lost, that's 240K. Even if your salary is initially 50% higher, it can still potentially take 15-20 years to get your money back, plus this delays your purchasing of your home etc. Worst part? your salary will most likely be LOWER because the other guy has experience and certs) - You can find a job without a degree (though the degree makes it easier obviously). Depending on the place, you can even move up without that degree - They see others with good salaries that don't even have a degree - There are exceptions, but a lot of IT stuff changes within 4 years, and there are few or no degrees that caters to certain IT aspects. A lot of the time you are stuck doing programming when you really just wanna be a sysadmin I personally dislike GE classes, I feel like I've done enough of them.
nster wrote: » It's crazy how widespread this is, and how easy of access it is. Hell, when I was looking for study material that gave feedback into what chapters I should focus my studying on I had started using **** without knowing what they were! It didn't take me long to realize something was up, but still... I'd like to at that the importance of a degree greatly varies with your location.
LeBroke wrote: » By many techies, degrees are seen as a waste of time. For example, you may have to take unnecessary, mandatory classes in things like English, social sciences or art to get general credits. Degrees are also extremely expensive, and offer a fairly low ROI in the current job market when compared to experience, certifications and money put in. I'm in this bracket - I'd be making double if I used the time I wasted on university to build experience, and wouldn't have a ton of student loans to show either.
LeBroke wrote: » Some people with degrees are arrogant pricks. "What do you mean I have to fix someone's computer, I've got a degree in X and you don't, I should be designing your infrastructure."
jaycrewz wrote: » Is this really that common? Yikes. Though tbh, I had someone on another forum recommend that I brain **** for the A+ because "you should know all this stuff already with your years of being a tech geek". Now while I did know about 70% of the material, there were a lot of things in the Mike Meyers test guide that I didnt know. And I read that thing cover to cover...and I loved all the extra knowledge I gained, even if some of it wasnt on the test. I liked the background knowledge I received. I even wasted plenty of time going on my on side research binges. I did stuff like watching videos on the production of CPUS and motherboards from scratch or learning about Unix, Linux, and Apple history, despite it not being on my test. Im just an information sponge.
jaycrewz wrote: » Is this really that common? Yikes.
EdTheLad wrote: » The big issue i have with all this is cert dumping, it's a lot easier to **** a cert than **** a degree, maybe this is why the degree wins out in the end.
jaycrewz wrote: » Im just an information sponge.
EdTheLad wrote: » It's a jealousy thing, i have a degree, do i look at people who don't have one with a seniority complex? No, why ? because that's not who i am. Everyone is different. A degree can seem like wasted time, i look at it as both wasted time and also knowing that i walked away learning more then i probably realize. The problem most of the time is that the cert guy is ahead in the race, the race just happens to be a long distance race and the degree guy has more potential to win, the cert guy knows this, and can be pissed off and lazy or can go get a degree. Now i'd look at this scenario as a little bit unfair to the cert guys, they actually get judged by the degree guys too, so its not one sided here. The big issue i have with all this is cert dumping, it's a lot easier to **** a cert than **** a degree, maybe this is why the degree wins out in the end.
jaycrewz wrote: » Hey, I was thinking about this for years actually....but definitely a lot more so recently, now that Ive decided to make a career for myself in IT. Why is it that many tech folks call a college degree unnecessary, useless, waste of time, etc etc. Ive encountered this attitude from all kinds of people throughout the years, but once I started reading more tech cert/job forums, I noticed the attitude is greater amongst techies. And from the job postings I'm seeing, I definitely would be a fish out of water if I lacked my Bachelors to help boost my resume (1 certification, no industry experience as of yet) Now while at times I have regretted majoring in business, I never have regretted getting my Bachelors for 2 big reasons: 1. College taught me how to write very well, and it expanded my vocabulary. My English and Technical Writing classes are something I always think of when I look back on my most helpful classes. One thing I have noticed over the years, whether it's writing papers in school or dealing with people in the professional world, is that many people are poor writers. And not to say that you cannot learn to write well without college, but Ive noticed people who've been to college do write better. 2. My major concentration was international business, so I met many international students and got a lot of experience with different cultures. I was also the on the executive board of a student campus group as the the head of PR. All of this taught me how to socialize with different people, build rapport, and I got some experience dealing with bureaucracy and politics. Sure you can get these experiences outside of college, but I'm simply saying I don't think I would have gotten them without it. So tell me what you think?
networker050184 wrote: » I don't think there is any disrespect for degrees specifically. More of a disrespect for the people that have them that think it makes them any better than the people that don't. Same with certs. Once you are hired on at a company no one cares about your degree. No one cares about your certifications. How awesome your resume looked. Can you get the job done or will someone have to pick up your slack? if you have to constantly bring up your qualifications to make yourself feel better no one likes you whether that is a degree, a cert or whatever.
philz1982 wrote: » Um, Cause they want to work at a 40k a year salary for the rest of their lives, one business idea away from being outsourced? Who knows, I've met plenty of IT folks who favor degrees. Maybe the "IT Folks" you are referencing are just straight up dumb and don't realize that they are sabotaging themselves. For a career field that rewards knowledge it's surprising folks would oppose it.
Techguru365 wrote: » I agree with alot of your points, but how does having a degree prevent your job from being outsourced?
VinnyCisco wrote: » I have no college degree and making more than 90K. Not having a degree doesn't automatically grant low salary. Just saying.
philz1982 wrote: » Gives you the flexibility to move to other verticals and other roles. Not as easy without Expert level certs. A guy with a Network + and a BS BA is going to fair better then a guy with just a Net+. If you move into the expert level certs it's a different story but that's not who we are talking about? or are we?
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