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College or Tech School ?
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headlnr
Junior Member
Registered: Aug 2000 Location: Country: State: Certifications: Working on:
Total Posts: 24
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College or Tech School ?
This may have been coverd, but still want to hear your opinions. I know overall college is the best option but, Is there opportunities going thru Schools like ITT or other tech schools? In your opinion what is the best option, college or Tech Schools?
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07-08-01 06:01 AM
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Randy
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Registered: Not Yet Location: Country: State: Certifications: Working on:
Total Posts: N/A
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College. Always. Degrees may not seem worth it now, but in ten years' time, if you find yourself without one, you will see what an advantage they are. Without at least a B.S. I would not even have been considerd for my current position. Never mind that a B.S. in Math/Physics is no more necessary to be a database programmer than a M.D. is to give first aid, but that's how it works. Always better to have it and not need it than to be caught in the reverse situation. Also, college gives you good opportunity to get some references, and get experience through cooperative education programs. You may, however, try to get into an institution like DeVry, which combines the two approaches. There you get a technical education as lots of hands-on, but you earn a degree at the same time. ITT Tech also has degree programs. This would seem the most interesting option for a person like yourself. Hope this helps.
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07-08-01 12:14 PM
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Kasor
Senior Member M

Registered: Jul 2000 Location: Yankee Country: USA State: Certifications: n^2 Working on: STUDYING!!!
Total Posts: 3159
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I agreed with Randy.
College will increase your life experience.
A tradition way to get yourself into a trouble and learn a good lesson.
It is a way to proof your skill, knowledge, education, and overall IQ and EQ. Don't wrong to get u off the track, but college also have fun, beer, party and many hot girls. I hope these get u the motivation.
__________________
Kill All Suffer 2 Reborn
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07-09-01 11:15 PM
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TW2001
Senior Member

Registered: Mar 2001 Location: Country: USA State: Certifications: A+,MCP Working on: BS CompSci
Total Posts: 1413
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07-10-01 03:44 PM
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headlnr
Junior Member
Registered: Aug 2000 Location: Country: State: Certifications: Working on:
Total Posts: 24
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Over the past few days I have put much thought into this and have come up with the same conclusion. Im going to stick with college. Hell im already enrolled and attending classes might as well continue on with it.
Thanks for the input.
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07-10-01 04:01 PM
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Randy
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07-10-01 04:21 PM
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dheinsdorf
eDirectory Inside

Registered: Mar 2001 Location: Yuma, AZ. Country: USA State: Certifications: CNE5, CNA5, AASET Working on: MCSA, CCNA, Linux
Total Posts: 340
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Re: college or Tech School ?
This goes a way back for me but in 1985-87 I was in the first class at DeVry Phoenix to be offered a Associates of Applied Science in Electronics Tech. 20 months, and a core degree to many entry level but upwardly mobile jobs today.
It was fast, very hard and extremely focused.
A month prior to graduation I landed a good job at Honeywell, and lots of fat companies were sucking up all the AASET candidates.
Community colleges and military offered similar training, and I worked along side these people. Not a boast but thier preparation didnt even compare to DeVry's.
It was good, but that was a different age.
quote: Originally posted by headlnr
This may have been coverd, but still want to hear your opinions. I know overall college is the best option but, Is there opportunities going thru Schools like ITT or other tech schools? In your opinion what is the best option, college or Tech Schools?
__________________
Doug Heinsdorf, CNE5, CNA5.
---------------------------
This is my Tree. There are many like it but this Tree is mine.
-=FullMetalNetwork=-
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07-24-01 05:11 AM
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Kasor
Senior Member M

Registered: Jul 2000 Location: Yankee Country: USA State: Certifications: n^2 Working on: STUDYING!!!
Total Posts: 3159
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07-24-01 09:41 PM
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GritsGirl
Junior Member
Registered: Jul 2001 Location: Country: USA State: Certifications: Working on: MOUS
Total Posts: 9
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Go for the Tech School
I have 24 years of experience as a word processor. Granted, it didn't always have the same title, but I've always had basically the same duties. I moved 4 hours away from home, so bypassed college so I could support myself. I make $55K per year and have friends with degrees who do not make as much as I do. Also, I've had supervisors who had degrees and attended the same "tech" courses that I did, but they could not do the job. (Anyone else have a similar boss?)
Everyone has to decide what's best for them. For me, it's more important to have skill, experience and IT training than it is to have a "degree." The bottom line is: a degree is all fine and good, but what can you ACTUALLY DO?
Last edited by GritsGirl on 07-26-01 at 04:33 PM
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07-26-01 04:29 PM
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Sotet
Member

Registered: May 2001 Location: Atlanta Country: USA State: Certifications: Working on: CIW
Total Posts: 76
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College or Cert??
I agree with GritsGirl, who wrote:
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For me, it's more important to have skill, experience and IT training than it is to have a "degree." The bottom line is: a degree is all fine and good, but what can you ACTUALLY DO?
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I am somone with two masters degrees, and a BA. The degrees has meant absolutely nothing in IT so far in my case .
I had worked for about 2 years at a Dot-Com and the degrees meant nothing. They looked for skill set, in my case, I was not promoted in part because of weak hardware knowledge. Some people as young as 18 or 19 were promoted up high due to their very advanced tech skill to the system administrator level making perhaps 50K, while those with MBAs or any traditional degree would remain in the trenches due to not playing politics and/or lacking skill set for troubleshooting. Luckily some with skill set were promoted and networking certifications mattered in some cases. (I had worked in a call center)
It really depends on your case, if you think a college degree is worth it for career enhancement, it may or may not be. I am proud I accomplished getting 3 degrees, and the only indirect thing about it that helped was having early exposure to the Internet in the early to mid 90s.
Unfortunately, the corporate climate has encouraged me further to work for myself in some capacity relating to the Internet, I still have some focusing to do before that is accomplished.
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07-26-01 08:18 PM
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