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#81 |
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Philosopher
Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 5,512
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The other bit of bad news for all you kids, according to tv this am, is that you will pay more into social security than you can expect to receive.
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"The problem with socialism is that you eventually run out of other people's money." M. Thatcher, Economics: Share The Wealth. Obamanomics: Share The Pain. ![]() Important things in life–beauty, grace, redemption, compassion, loyalty, love–are beyond the reach of reason. Which doesn’t make them any less real. |
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#82 |
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i don't care
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: in my dreams, i am still in perú
Posts: 2,517
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a vendor who comes into my work was complaining about how his kid had no ideas what to study in college, so i suggested he send the kid to community college for a couple years to get some general studies out of the way as well as introduce him to what college is like, and the guy stuck his nose up in the air at the idea of his kid going to a community college.
fine, pay some outrageous amount of first year tuition and find out your kid would rather major in dope smoking if it floats your boat. |
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Don't you just hate it when some uppity Black Guys escape from the Liberal Brainwash? - Robert Prey |
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#83 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: SW Florida
Posts: 4,062
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#84 |
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Graduate Poster
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Thornton, CO, USA
Posts: 1,504
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By the end of this weekend I will have completed 242 hours of college classes, of which 61 hours were graduate classes. In the eyes of the business world, this does not imply that I'm qualified to do anything. Getting a college degree is no guarantee of anything.
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"Facts are stupid things." Ronald Reagan |
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#85 |
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Master Poster
Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 2,970
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Really? That was the attitude where I live in the 1980s. My father was principal at a vocational school.... we'd make fun of his students all the time. Over the 10 years people seem to be realizing just how much of a waste University can be. Unless you know what you want to do (teaching, nursing, lawer,ect) and you know the path leads through University and you have the ability and dedication... University can be pretty useless. You come out with a Bachelor of Science and little idea what you want to do, you may find yourself in big trouble. |
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#86 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 4,178
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__________________
Gamemaster: "A horde of rotting zombies is shambling toward you. The sign over the door says 'Accounting'" |
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#87 |
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Mad Mod Poet God
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: St. Louis, MO
Posts: 2,727
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"You can find that book everywhere and the risk is that many people who read it believe that those fairy tales are real. I think I have the responsibility to clear things up to unmask the cheap lies contained in books like that." - Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone |
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#88 |
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Straussian
Join Date: May 2002
Location: Los Angeles
Posts: 6,940
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Arrested Development is coming back! Michael (to GOB): Get rid of the Seaward. Lucille: I’ll leave when I’m good and ready. |
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#89 |
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Neo-Post-Retro-Revivalist
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: The Emerald City
Posts: 7,958
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During the dotcom bubble, I worked for a very large company that required college degrees for entry-level customer-service jobs (they would make exceptions for those with a certain amount of relevant experience). They didn't care what your degree was in, only that you had one. For work that a sufficiently trained monkey could have done. It certainly did nothing to ensure that we had a better quality of customer service, or more diligent employees. It just meant that we had a lot of over-educated slackers with degrees in philosophy, women's studies (sorry, wymyn's studies), history, literature, etc.; who tended to take extended lunch breaks to go out into the parking lot and get stoned, and download pirated music instead of actually taking customer calls.
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"All opinions are not equal. Some are a very great deal more robust, sophisticated and well supported in logic and argument than others." -- Douglas Adams "The absence of evidence might indeed not be evidence of absence, but it's a pretty good start." -- PhantomWolf "Let's see the buggers figure that one out." - John Lennon |
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#90 |
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Neo-Post-Retro-Revivalist
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: The Emerald City
Posts: 7,958
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It's not even necessary to pay all that much better, if the benefits and environment are good enough. When I worked for Large Internet Company, the pay rate for the vast majority of the non-critical positions was not only in the low end of the average range, in many cases it set the bottom boundary. But they had very good benefits, and one of the best corporate cultures I have ever encountered. During my tenure there, a few people left for better paying jobs elsewhere, but more people came from better paying jobs at places a whole lot less pleasant.
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"All opinions are not equal. Some are a very great deal more robust, sophisticated and well supported in logic and argument than others." -- Douglas Adams "The absence of evidence might indeed not be evidence of absence, but it's a pretty good start." -- PhantomWolf "Let's see the buggers figure that one out." - John Lennon |
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#91 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 4,178
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__________________
Gamemaster: "A horde of rotting zombies is shambling toward you. The sign over the door says 'Accounting'" |
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#92 |
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Crone of War
Join Date: Feb 2006
Posts: 6,879
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This thread is very enlightening and depressing all at once. It sure as hell doesn't give me an incentive to return to school, though I had been struggling with the idea for a while.
I started writing a bit about my own experience in the job market and the education situation here, then I decided it was off-topic and not really relevant. Maybe I'll post it in Community later. ZING! ![]() Honestly, that sounds like complete and utter corporate BS to me.
Quote:
Yet the best programmers I ever worked with are two guys without college degrees. One of them did study a bit at university but he never graduated, and the other has the same kind of degree I do, a DEC (technical degree) from a Cégep (I think the closest US equivalent to a Cégep is a vocational school or perhaps community college). And another excellent programmer I know is of course my boyfriend, whom I went to Cégep with. Again no Bachelor's or anything.
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I remember my interview for my second job ever. The IT director asked me a few technical questions. Some I knew what to answer right away, others I wasn't sure of, and when that happened, I said so. "I'm not sure, I'd have to look it up." or simply "I don't know, I never used this technology, but I can learn". No BS, no fumbling with buzzwords. I think he appreciated that, cause at the end of the interview he said "okay, you don't have that much experience [it was true enough] and you don't know everything, but I think you have potential", and he hired me. It never crossed my mind to try to "guess" the answers to his technical questions or try to pretend I knew what I didn't. The best part was, a few years later at a different job (when I was more senior) when my colleague, a MySQL expert (he even did those super-hard-but-probably-useless certifications), asked basic MySQL questions to applicants. Such as, "what is an index? why and how do you use indexes?". And one applicant going "oh, an index, well, you use it to... index data, of course". He just spouted meaningless buzzwords and tried to pretend he knew. He could have said "oh, I heard this term before but I never worked with them before so I don't really know how indexes actually work". That would be a lot more acceptable than making **** up in front of a MySQL certified guy with a very low tolerance for BS. ![]() lol. Glad to see it's the same nonsense elsewhere than where I used to work. XD Well, we have the "pre-university" types of Cégep programs here (I didn't do that, I did a "technical" program which is 3 years and can lead straight to the job market), which is exactly what you describe: 2 years of general advanced study, more or less related to the field you seek at university. I don't know that it's really "hard as hell to pass", though, but maybe even that helps a bit? Every high school graduates has to go through this before going to uni, though "mature student" (e.g. someone over 21) can go straight to uni and skip Cégep. Tuition for Cégep is a LOT cheaper than uni too. But it's not really that hard to pass, and I think universities are overflowing with students. Then again we aren't savage about uni tuition either (despite recent attempts by our government to become more like that... that did not go over well xD) so student debt isn't as ridiculous. :P |
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#93 |
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Critical Thinker
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Queens, NY
Posts: 423
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Let me try it one more time to convey what I mean.
The people a good employer looks for have passion and ability in the field they are hiring for. The thinking goes that if a candidate has the passion and ability they would get a relevant degree in the area they are passionate about. The only thing that would hold them back is something very severe otherwise you could say they might be lacking in passion or ability. With that in mind it makes sense to start looking for the people that have passion and ability within the pool of people that have the requisite degree as you are more likely to find them there. The degree does not confer passion or ability to a person looking just to get the degree. The lack of degree does not imply you lack passion or ability. The degree program applied to a person that has passion and ability will help that person gain fundamental improvements to their abilities. |
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#94 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 4,178
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__________________
Gamemaster: "A horde of rotting zombies is shambling toward you. The sign over the door says 'Accounting'" |
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#95 |
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Critical Thinker
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Queens, NY
Posts: 423
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Yes, but how many are there? If you can't show that the brightest and most talented are broke and can't get financial aid to go to community college or some other hardship then the system will stay as it is and wait for those people to overcome their challenges.
Secondly, I was not trying to explain employers that Luchog described. Just because they exist does not invalidate the need to filter by degree. |
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#96 |
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Graduate Poster
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Thornton, CO, USA
Posts: 1,504
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Are you talking about hiring people straight out of college? If so, this might have some truth to it. Otherwise, it's been my experience that employers don't care what degrees you have or what you majored in. Nor do they care what your GPA was.
I do agree that employers tend to look for someone with passion. Unfortunately, passion and ability are not perfectly correlated. I've worked with many people who were enthusiastic about their work and exuded lots of confidence who were much better at talking the talk than walking the walk. Many people have passion and confidence simply because their knowledge of a field is so limited that they don't what really constitutes "good". |
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"Facts are stupid things." Ronald Reagan |
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#97 |
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Graduate Poster
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Thornton, CO, USA
Posts: 1,504
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Please do. I'd love to get someone else's impression.
Quote:
To tie in with this thread, the most important thing that a college education does for you is to teach you how to talk and act like a stereotypical person in your chosen field. Talking and acting "properly" are more important that technical competence. |
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"Facts are stupid things." Ronald Reagan |
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#98 |
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Crone of War
Join Date: Feb 2006
Posts: 6,879
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You are 100% correct about that last sentence. The same McGill master's degree ignoramus I was talking about managed to negotiate a salary that was about twice of what the standard programmers earned.
He was the worst "IT professional" I ever worked with, but he was one of the best manipulators and smooth talkers ever.
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#99 |
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Neo-Post-Retro-Revivalist
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: The Emerald City
Posts: 7,958
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__________________
"All opinions are not equal. Some are a very great deal more robust, sophisticated and well supported in logic and argument than others." -- Douglas Adams "The absence of evidence might indeed not be evidence of absence, but it's a pretty good start." -- PhantomWolf "Let's see the buggers figure that one out." - John Lennon |
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#100 |
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Neo-Post-Retro-Revivalist
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: The Emerald City
Posts: 7,958
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[quote=Morrigan;8523846]I wouldn't be. I've had to screen applicants before and I didn't need such tests, but I knew which kind of technical questions to ask. It was so easy to tell the BS-ers from the genuine articles. They'd fumble about and try to sound smart or knowledgeable and repeat vaguely related buzzwords without understanding what they really meant. I don't get it. Did they think they could fool us?
The problem is that too much of technical hiring is done by managers with little to no technical expertise. They are the sort of people who think in buzzwords, and as long as the applicant can spout a convincing line of BS with an air of confidence, then chances are good they'll be hired. Or, if they do have technical expertise, it's either out of date, or in the wrong area (eg. network admins hiring programmers), or it's all on paper with little practical experience. I remember back during the dotcom bubble when there was a flood of MCSE certifications on the market. Due to the proliferation of Windows NT Server platforms, businesses were hiring just about anyone with an MCSE, and most positions required one or they wouldn't bother to even call for an interview. This led to a boom in certification mills, organizations that would teach people how to pass the exams, not how to do the job. So suddenly the job market was inundated with people who had shiny new certifications, and absolutely no clue how to actually do the job they were certified for. That soon branched out to all the other high-demand certification -- A+, Network+, CCNA, etc. -- and soon even a legitimately acquired certification wasn't worth the paper it was written on. Technical/vocational schools were churning them out by the hundreds. Another part of the problem is that so much of the initial applicant screening is done by HR and recruiters, not by technical staff; and they rarely have the ability to tell true expertise from a good line of BS. All they look for are the certifications, degrees, and/or buzzwords. So a lot of highly qualified applicants will get missed, while a lot of confident BS artists get to to move on to the next level in the hiring process. |
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"All opinions are not equal. Some are a very great deal more robust, sophisticated and well supported in logic and argument than others." -- Douglas Adams "The absence of evidence might indeed not be evidence of absence, but it's a pretty good start." -- PhantomWolf "Let's see the buggers figure that one out." - John Lennon |
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#101 |
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Philosopher
Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 5,512
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Sorting a stack of resumes with a pile that contains only college graduates is a big time-saver in finding the right candidate without examining all resumes.
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#102 |
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Crone of War
Join Date: Feb 2006
Posts: 6,879
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#103 |
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Graduate Poster
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Thornton, CO, USA
Posts: 1,504
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That's a problem to be dealt with later. Requiring a college degree has at least 3 advantages:
1) Reduces the number of applications that need to be reviewed; 2) Increases the chance that the person who gets hired comes from a "good" family and knows how to talk and act like a "professional"; 3) Allows the hiring manager to have specific items that he/she can use to brag to his/her managers about the person that was just hired. Whether the person hired is actually well-qualified for the job is something to be dealt with later. Generally, everyone involved is acting in their own immediate self-interest, and requiring a college degree allows a hiring manager to minimize his/her effort while getting "objective" criteria to base the hiring decision on. |
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"Facts are stupid things." Ronald Reagan |
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#104 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 4,178
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__________________
Gamemaster: "A horde of rotting zombies is shambling toward you. The sign over the door says 'Accounting'" |
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#105 |
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Philosopher
Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 5,512
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__________________
"The problem with socialism is that you eventually run out of other people's money." M. Thatcher, Economics: Share The Wealth. Obamanomics: Share The Pain. ![]() Important things in life–beauty, grace, redemption, compassion, loyalty, love–are beyond the reach of reason. Which doesn’t make them any less real. |
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#106 |
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Graduate Poster
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Thornton, CO, USA
Posts: 1,504
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Perhaps being cynical. There's not much contention that companies are requiring college degrees for jobs which don't require skills that are unique to college grads. That they do this to reduce the number of applicants is a widespread opinion on job board forums. It's as good a guess as any.
I have no idea how hiring decisions are made, which was reflected in my 3rd item. There seems to be a desire to make the decision be "objective", i.e., based on the applicant having specific years of experience doing specific tasks with specific tools, rather than based on the applicant's intelligence, overall knowledge, and growth potential, which require information which can't simply be listed on a resume/CV. I don't believe that hiring based on experience with specific tools is necessarily an effective way of choosing the employee who will work out best in the long term. |
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"Facts are stupid things." Ronald Reagan |
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#107 |
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Philosopher
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: 16 miles from 7 lakes
Posts: 8,456
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HR departments have changed over the years. Their task now is to disqualify applicants
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"Political correctness is a doctrine,...,which holds forth the proposition that it is entirely possible to pick up a turd by the clean end." "I pointed out that his argument was wrong in every particular, but he rightfully took me to task for attacking only the weak points." Myriad http://forums.randi.org/showthread.php?postid=6853275#post6853275 |
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