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Itrimble wrote: » A growing number of companies, managers, and HR representatives are repeatedly saying that the next generation of the workforce doesn't have the essential skills needed to perform at their jobs. Read this article.
Numerous economists have noted that when employers raise wages, skilled employees suddenly become easier to find – and Cappelli notes that much of the discussion about a skills gap appears to be driven by employers looking to hire workers on the cheap.
Claymoore wrote: » The skills gap is a myth. Either the candidates with those skills won't work for that salary, or HR is looking for a purple squirrel that doesn't exist. Like posting a req that requires 10 years experience as a Java coder and a CCIE, masters degree required with PhD preferred - salary starting at 75k.
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...
beaucaldwell wrote: » From my experience, you're more likely to get a job in IT having hands on experience and no college degree than a degree with no experience. I work for the gov't and have no degree, and my certs aren't even worth mentioning (don't even have an A+). A degree in IT seems to really only come into play when you're looking at intermediate/advanced IT positions or management. A lot of places do require a degree but if you havn't step foot on a job or haven't been working in IT for several years that degree isn't going to do much for you; hand's on experience always prevails. Always seems best to get your foot in the door somewhere even if it's a helpdesk, and work on some certs (which are more current and more relivant) and then slowly do school if you so choose. From speaking to many recruiters over the years its this order 1) job experience 2) certs 3) degree. Odds are if you're going for a position that requires a degree you already have several years on the job and several certs. edit: food for thought, I make about 55k/yr and have no degree and only an HP APS cert and a Mac Integration cert...
jaycrewz wrote: » And here's the rub...why do many people, such as yourself, always make this an either/or situation. One can have a degree, certs, AND experience. Ive seen more than enough posts online of an IT professional saying a degree got them a bump in position and pay when coupled with their certs and experience. Thats the thing I cannot understand...that when some people downplay a degree...they always dream up a degree holder with zero certs and zero experience.
NOC-Ninja wrote: » The thing that pisses them off too is they have to teach this new grad guy.
AwesomeGarrett wrote: » I'm on the less popular side of this argument. I don't have time to teach L2 and L3 engineers technology, I have technology that I want to learn. I feel that this thread got derailed.
TeKniques wrote: » Here's my advice and 0.02 - if you go to college just major in something with a high ROI that's beneficial and you can use to grow your career. There's nothing wrong with going to college and getting a respectable degree. Quite misleading to say the least. People who major in degrees with a low ROI have trouble in the job market. You can Google the list and it's not that surprising what's on it. Those who major in something that is actually worth something (Computer Science, Math, Business, Accounting, Law, Medicine, etc.) will have very little trouble finding a decent job. Talk about anecdotal evidence. Where are these people? Coming up in IT most if not all of the executives and managers I reported to were college educated and never said anything like that to me. As a manager if I said that to one of my employees I would be embarrassed, and any manager that says that is not a good one.
Nersesian wrote: » - Funny thing is, less than 15% of BBA, BSA, BBAA, actually keep their jobs after 90 days. Engineers? Less than 20% are able to keep careers as engineers. Citation needed.
Networking_Student wrote: » Business degrees are practically a dime a dozen, buddy who is a McDonalds Manager with his GED in the UW District, hangs his GED in a plaque over his desk for his employees to see his education vs his position. He hires almost exclusively bachellor degree holders. Of his 42 employees, 30 of them are business degree holders. The rest are students pursuing or have other degrees.
Jon_Cisco wrote: » What is missing from this story is the long term effect of having a degree. It would be interesting to go 30 years in the future and see how the lifetime earnings match up between the employees and manager. My guess is unless your buddy buys the McDonald's he will eventually hit a ceiling in his position.
Networking_Student wrote: » As the General Manager of his McDonalds near a college, he makes more than $90,000. Has a 3200 sq ft house and a 2015 Mercedes to show for it. He lives in the same neighborhood as doctors and lawyers with a network server that I built with a router, three switches, four hubs and two desk tops per room hardwired, PS4 and XBOXONE per room, and a coffee maker that talks to him. He's yet to have a business degree employee leave and make anymore than $40k. With the exception of one who is a general manager of a Taco Bell several miles from his McDonalds with a $75,000 salary. Said employees Tax Transcript is in a frame sitting by my friends GED. Walmart Store Manager is $120k and no college required, Walmart pays for education and training to perform the job of managing 400 employees. (My Walmart had 400) and Home Depot Store Managers are upwards of $75,000. And no positions require degrees outside of the retail companies IT Departments. My Home Depot Store General Manager, she made $150k salary managing 105 employees and a $30 million store. 7 years working there, and had gotten her GED at 45 years old, only seven months of me being there. She left my store to manage a bigger one with an $30,000 increase in pay. The notion someone would think a job would top out, simply because of a lack of degree is mind boggling.
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