So I'm going to Devry, learning a lot towards my networking degree. How important are GPA's,in the field? Are they more important than working knowledge or experience?
I just graduated so I can probably provide some recent experience...my GPA was good but from some of my classmates I know:
- Most of the higher paying organizations (and even a lot of smaller orgs) want to see at least a 3.0....and these days (because so many people are going to college) they can even be particularly picky and request a 3.5. The reason this is troublesome is because a lot of orgs have GPA filters...and will automatically toss out applications without looking at them if they don't meet the GPA.
- That makes it harder to get a position if you have a bad gpa, but not impossible. If you know your stuff and go to career fairs (or find a contact within the company) you can articulate yourself better than a resume can, and truly show your GPA doesn't represent your IT knowledge.
- Additionally if you can get a solid year (the more the better) of IT experience (even if it's just a student help desk position) while in college it'll make it a lot easier.
The job market has changed a bit...experience is still a huge factor...and definitely is king in some realms....but overall the IT market is becoming so saturated networking is becoming the king. So go to career fairs, make and keep connections on Linkedin, and you'll be fine. I had a classmate who graduated with a 2.3 gpa to a 65k job...just because she happened to have connections.