College degrees blown out of proportion
GPA itself, IMO, is not the best determining factor in an intelligent individual and an estimate of their performance.
Example... recent Orgo Chem class I took, we had one student who spent 24/7 in the tutor hall and hired private turors etc... while myself, only showed up to class when it was scheduled and never recieved a minute of tutoring. We both passed the class with an A and both aced the final with a 98.
Sure the GPA can say ya, they got it. But does it honestly give a good look into an individuals level of adaptation and skill and ability to think outside the box? I dont think so!
Here in the med field I see many peopl who have good GPAs in college, but most cant speak a word of english and if its not specifically highlighted in a med book, they are SOL. Just my observations and opinion but yes a good GPA is a positive thing to have but not the end all.
Example... recent Orgo Chem class I took, we had one student who spent 24/7 in the tutor hall and hired private turors etc... while myself, only showed up to class when it was scheduled and never recieved a minute of tutoring. We both passed the class with an A and both aced the final with a 98.
Sure the GPA can say ya, they got it. But does it honestly give a good look into an individuals level of adaptation and skill and ability to think outside the box? I dont think so!
Here in the med field I see many peopl who have good GPAs in college, but most cant speak a word of english and if its not specifically highlighted in a med book, they are SOL. Just my observations and opinion but yes a good GPA is a positive thing to have but not the end all.
Originally Posted by Kremlin,Jun 30 2010, 05:59 PM
GPAs are like breast sizes. People make too big a deal out of them -- frankly, there's a pretty big "acceptable" range.
Originally Posted by kntrider,Jun 30 2010, 03:46 PM
I work at one of the big 4's where you can't even get your foot in the door without a degree. So you have a degree, great as long as you have 1-2 years experience at a Fortune 100 company than we will interview you.
I've been interviewing 2-3 candidates a week, many of them my age or older that only get tossed my way once they've passed the HR requirements and have already had a couple of phone screenings.
I need someone desperately on my project but unfortunately no one has stepped up and showed the talent and skills that is required.
Many people can complete an education, few people can apply and build upon it in the real world from what I have gathered.
When searching for jobs it seems to me that the most important aspect is networking and experience. At least in most technical positions. you can send the perfect resume to a company but if a respected employee walks into the boss's office with a resume and says something along the lines of "this guy/gal knows their stuff, they are who you are looking for" chances are they'll get the job over the no-name with a nice resume. I also agree that how you present yourself means a lot also. if you have an interview and are clean cut, well spoken, and dressed well (and do your homework on the position) that says a lot about you to prospective employers..
Originally Posted by KeithMajkasays,Jun 30 2010, 04:46 PM
GPA: Important when applying for secondary education
GPA: Not important when sitting in a job interview
GPA: Not important when sitting in a job interview
Go apply for a job at the global accounting firm Ernst & Young and find out how important a solid GPA really is. An accounting firm doesn't get to global status by hiring C students.
Originally Posted by OverBooster,Jul 1 2010, 10:15 AM
WRONG!!!!!!!
Go apply for a job at the global accounting firm Ernst & Young and find out how important a solid GPA really is. An accounting firm doesn't get to global status by hiring C students.
Go apply for a job at the global accounting firm Ernst & Young and find out how important a solid GPA really is. An accounting firm doesn't get to global status by hiring C students.

GPA: Not important when sitting in a job interview
Originally Posted by adrs2k,Jun 30 2010, 02:55 PM
GPA is def important....well depending on your profession, company, and job title.
GPA makes a 2 payscale difference when getting a job with the federal government. anyting under a 3.0 and you're coming in at GS-5, over a 3.0 and you go in at GS-7. also, some federal agencies wont even look at your application if you're under a 3.0
I dont think any college degree is waste per se. An education is always a good thing and even if it dosent teach you a specific skillset, it does teach or further develop ones ability to think critically. however, i think some degrees have little to no relevance in the job field and probably wouldnt be worth it for career purposes. going to school to get a degree in womans studies with the intent to be marketable in the job field is stupid IMO.
Originally Posted by S2020,Jun 30 2010, 12:47 PM
Depending on the major, I agree and disagree with Kyushin. For some field a college degree is an absolute requirement. This is not blown out of proportion at all.
for some other fields, it's completely useless.
so it is too broad to generalize on the value of college degree without knowing more about what one's career is.
for some other fields, it's completely useless.
so it is too broad to generalize on the value of college degree without knowing more about what one's career is.
I went to Cal-Poly for Mechnical Engineering. Dropped out and after many years found myself in the IT field. No employer as of yet has cared that I don't have a degree.
As you gain work experience, employer are less concerned about there you graduated from.
Originally Posted by Voodoo_S2K,Jul 1 2010, 09:02 AM
I have two friends that graduated from Washington University School of Medicine who were both highly sought out after graduation just based on the fact of where they graduated from.
I went to Cal-Poly for Mechnical Engineering. Dropped out and after many years found myself in the IT field. No employer as of yet has cared that I don't have a degree.
As you gain work experience, employer are less concerned about there you graduated from.
I went to Cal-Poly for Mechnical Engineering. Dropped out and after many years found myself in the IT field. No employer as of yet has cared that I don't have a degree.
As you gain work experience, employer are less concerned about there you graduated from.
There's always going to be someone out there who is more qulified than you (in most cases).
Now-a days, if you were to drop out of Cal-Poly, I highly doubt you'd find a job as easily (or at all) in the IT field (or any field for that matter). My friend graduated SJSU with a Computer Engineering degree and makes $9/hr at a local company doing their IT.
Originally Posted by clawhammer,Jun 30 2010, 03:27 PM
My favorite is this stupid moron:
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/29/your-mon...PJil3hjittzctvw
Cliff notes:
-chick goes to NYU and gets an interdisciplinary degree in religious and women’s studies
-chick racks up over $100k in student loans
-chick ends up getting a completely different job out in CA
-chick can't afford the payments on student loans
-chick is blaming the lender for her bad decisions.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/29/your-mon...PJil3hjittzctvw
Cliff notes:
-chick goes to NYU and gets an interdisciplinary degree in religious and women’s studies
-chick racks up over $100k in student loans
-chick ends up getting a completely different job out in CA
-chick can't afford the payments on student loans
-chick is blaming the lender for her bad decisions.
... and where's Obama when you need him?



