69matrix69
Weaksauce
- Joined
- May 4, 2005
- Messages
- 118
yea, i have a computer science degree and i couldn't find a job in the field when i looked. (a couple years ago) now im disabled so its irrelevant to me . those lists are total BS
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Heres a hint: If you have a degree in Educational Services, go back and get your Masters.![]()
Truth about getting a job in any comp sci/eng field - they'll look at your school, and if it happens to be a top school with really good grade, that's a bonus.
Comp Sci and IT degrees/certs are two ENTIRELY different fields/things.
Comp Sci = programming nerds = nothing to fucking do with CCNA/MCSE/IT.
(also, MCITP is gone, it's back to MCSE).
I like this thread![]()
Software job hiring in Silicon Valley go like this, listed in order of importance
1) Network. It's who you know and who can help you out. Knowing the right people can get you into many places that the HR lady would have just told you to GTFO.
2) School matters to a degree. Startups even more so.
3) GPA. Certain companies if you come from a certain school and have a certain GPA you don't even need to interview, you're in automatically if you choose to go.
Man it's rough out there for you guys. Even though I am in an entry level position, I did get the job at a large company in my home town which pays well. Most of what got me in the door was the fact that I landed an internship and built relationships with people around the office. What brought me back time and time again (for the next 2 summers after the first) was the fact that they saw I could be taught how to do things and was actively learning myself. When I finally got hired on permanently the summer after I graduated, it wasn't because of my degree in the sense that I knew stuff, it was because I could be taught and I expressed that in the interview through the series of questions they asked.
You got your job because you knew someone at the company! You are a monster!!!
These lists are such bullshit, especially in the It field. $65k for a Comp sci? What a load of crap lol. Want to know what a comp sci degree will get you? a $25k sheet of really rough toilet paper. All comp sci says is you can turn on a computer without hopefully burning the building down. You want to see 65k? You come to the table with certifications that say you actually know how to do something like CCNA, MCITP or other recognized certifications.
hmmm I have a BA degree in english ... and due to crushing student loans with high interest rates
Because CS =/= IT.
You should get your money back from those who talked you into majoring in English, and those who allowed you to do it.
I mean WTF, who could in good conscience let you get an English degree in 2007 (you presumably started that year) when the economy was already heading into the crapper.
I know of a younger couple, both majoring in "American Studies". Masters/PhD...good luck recouping those loans.
Lol.. well, don't they just go into Real Estate and make more money than the rest of us?
I agree with number 1. 3 of my 4 jobs over the last 12 years have been due to someone I knew, and before deciding on my current job, when a few folks found I was leaving my old place, I had 3 former co-workers asking me to join the places they were at.
I haven't interviewed that often.. maybe a total of 7 times in my career, but GPA has never come up and the only reason school comes up is if the interviewer has the same alma mater.. in which case we talk about the school and some of the professors and if we had the same ones.
I have actually interviewed quite a few folks, and from my perspective, I could care less about school. The only thing it tells me is if they were able to finish something they started. More importantly for me is, how adaptable are they.. can they learn? And secondly, can they think out of the box when needed. Also, can they work well with the team? Hard questions to answer in a short interview while also making sure they are technically sound.
These lists are such bullshit, especially in the It field. $65k for a Comp sci? What a load of crap lol. Want to know what a comp sci degree will get you? a $25k sheet of really rough toilet paper. All comp sci says is you can turn on a computer without hopefully burning the building down. You want to see 65k? You come to the table with certifications that say you actually know how to do something like CCNA, MCITP or other recognized certifications.
Dear lord this thread is filled with more crap than most.
Where exactly was this shift of CS to IT? 99% of people with engineering degrees are not working in IT job titles. They are working in Engineer job titles. CS maps to software engineer, mechanical to mechanical, systems to sytems, and EE...to any of the above. Any engineering job title especially entry level will require at a minimum a BS in the respective field. The Degree matters and the GPA matters more so than the school. Not every position will have Harvard or Colorado School of Mines applicants but they will all have BS and GPA
These lists are such bullshit, especially in the It field. $65k for a Comp sci? What a load of crap lol. Want to know what a comp sci degree will get you? a $25k sheet of really rough toilet paper. All comp sci says is you can turn on a computer without hopefully burning the building down. You want to see 65k? You come to the table with certifications that say you actually know how to do something like CCNA, MCITP or other recognized certifications.
The median starting salary for bachelor's CS graduates at CMU was $100,000 last year. It's not bullshit, though it obviously depends on the school.No, comp sci is just a generalist entry level degree. I have a comp sci degree and didn't take a single programming class. It also is the biggest waste of time I have in my entire life. I literally do not even put it on my resume anymore.
I'm guessing you're a graduate of Colorado School of Mines? XD
Dear lord this thread is filled with more crap than most.
Where exactly was this shift of CS to IT? 99% of people with engineering degrees are not working in IT job titles. They are working in Engineer job titles. CS maps to software engineer
To be fair CSM is a very good engineering school, but yea...I don't think it's got the same prestige as Harvard![]()
Oh I'm not trying to denigrate the school by any means. I was just curious to why that school was randomly mentioned lol
CSM is generally not as big of a name school to stanford, harvard, ucberkeley, mit, or chicago etc, but anybody that knows anything about STEM will have heard of CSM lol
How can this be? We are constantly told by industry and political leaders that there is a severe shortage of qualified applicants entering STEM disciplines, and we need to dramitically increase the number of H-1B visas issued to satisfy demand. And yet, starting salaries in these fields aren't even keeping pace with the general rate of inflation. Something fishy about that.
All have concluded that U.S. higher education produces far more science and engineering graduates annually than there are S&E job openingsthe only disagreement is whether it is 100 percent or 200 percent more. Were there to be a genuine shortage at present, there would be evidence of employers raising wage offers to attract the scientists and engineers they want. But the evidence points in the other direction: Most studies report that real wages in manybut not allscience and engineering occupations have been flat or slow-growing, and unemployment as high or higher than in many comparably-skilled occupations.
but unemployment among scientists and engineers is higher than in other professions such as physicians, dentists, lawyers, and registered nurses, and surprisingly high unemployment rates prevail for recent graduates even in fields with alleged serious shortages such as engineering (7.0 percent), computer science (7.8 percent) and information systems (11.7 percent).