ScionPI2005
Call Me a Cab
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- Seattle, Washington
jamespowers said:Not necessarily a character reference but it shows you can follow directions long enough to get a degree. I was actually told that once by an employer.
This is interesting. I had a similar conversation with a coworker of mine at a former job. I was discussing my difficulty finding "my niche" since graduating in 2008. Along without discussion of where I'd like to go with my career in criminology and investigations, my coworker brought up the FBI, and the special agents. I explained that when I talked to the FBI, they wanted at least three years of full time work experience regardless of any degrees obtained. Until graduation, I hadn't started working full time, but in my mind, had a pretty decent entry level amount of work experience in my field at the part time level (roughly two years of private security experience plus four years of part time private investigations experience resulting in my own license).
Additionally, I commented to my coworker that I felt a degree should count for something, as it takes years to obtain and shows dedication. My coworker sort of waved the degree off and said depending on where you go to school, you can drag yourself out of bed and head to class in pajamas, so his argument was that it doesn't really show any sort of work ethic.
I guess I disagree with that. I know some college students go to class looking like they're ready for bed, but surely the ones that are dedicated and pass their classes and finish know they'll have to start dressing professionally and "looking professional" once they enter the work world. A degree has to count for something. It's just weird that some employers focus on the degree, and others focus on the practical experience.