Oh man.. you all are opening a BIG can of worms here..

Testing for certifications has been fairly well discredited because it's too 
easy to set up "certificate mills" and because the certifications tend to be 
single manufacturer specific (e.g. Cisco Network Engineer, Microsoft Certified 
Professional, Novell, etc. etc.etc).  You'll note that employment ads these 
days don't ask for certifications as much any more..  (although ones like PMP, 
which are more generalized, although specific to the certifying organization, 
you'll see)

The requirement for a degree has very little to do with the material you may 
have studied in the pursuit of that degree, particularly in the software field. 
 30 years ago, there were very few degrees in software fields (e.g. at UCLA, it 
was Math/CS; at Cal it was EE/CS).  My wife (erstwhile software developer, now 
IT manager) has a degree in Poli Sci (one could argue that this is actually a 
pretty useful field of study when it comes to being in management).


Part of the "value" of a degree is that for new entrants to the workforce (with 
no previous paid work experience), it indicates that you have the ability to 
stick with something for 4 years, even though there may be "scut work" kind of 
requirements.   A degree from an accredited institution also means that you've 
had some moderate breadth of exposure to various topics beyond some narrow 
specialization (e.g. you probably had to write something at some point):  the 
"well-rounded worker".  This is predicated on the assumption that as a 
professional, you'll inevitably have to do things outside what you've done 
before, and the 4 year degree (in theory) indicates that you're not going to be 
hopeless when that occurs.

Ultimately, it is a "signal" for traits deemed desirable by employers.

An alternate path is professional licensure.  In some places, getting a 
professional license does not require a 4 year degree, but does require 6 years 
of experience, with detailed references from engineers who supervised you, etc. 
 (in fact, some number of years of a degree can count for some of the 
experience years, providing it's from a ABET accredited curriculum, etc.)


Jim Lux


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Ellis H. Wilson III
Sent: Wednesday, October 24, 2012 6:32 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Beowulf] Degree

On 10/24/12 09:19, Hearns, John wrote:
> Thing is, I need some kind of degree in this stuff to do the kind of 
> work I really want to do. Especially in Germany, organisations 
> involved in HPC usually strictly require an advanced degree if you 
> want to be paid.
>
>
> In the UK it is quite normal for people who want to gain qualifications
> whilst working to go through the Open University   http://www.open.ac.uk/
>
> http://www8.open.ac.uk/europe/in-your-country/germany

This is actually a really interesting problem to me personally, as, despite 
having followed the traditional degree path, I would have MUCH rathered not 
have paid or attended any classes.  I am 100% a book-learner and put zero stock 
in old-school style lecture formats.  I actually set up a number of agreements 
in undergrad where the teacher knew I wouldn't be there except for exams, and 
achieved some of my highest grades for those courses.  This form of learning is 
far more efficient in nearly every way, and allows one to learn at his or her 
own pace.

Does anyone know of any efforts to just establish tests that one could take in 
order to be accredited as having one skill-set or another?  I haven't yet 
bumped into any establishments like that, but I feel like they have to be out 
there.

Such a system would put degrees on the order of a few thousand of dollars/euros 
instead of the current standard (at least here in the US), where you're leaving 
undergrad with tens of thousands in debt and graduate degrees generally 
(masters/etc other than PhDs) leave you with hundreds of thousands in debt.

There is no reason for this -- I don't need majestic stone buildings, 
overworked professors, and well-kept greenery to learn.  This is an artifact of 
an older age and in my personal opinion, it's got to go.

Best,

ellis
_______________________________________________
Beowulf mailing list, [email protected] sponsored by Penguin Computing To 
change your subscription (digest mode or unsubscribe) visit 
http://www.beowulf.org/mailman/listinfo/beowulf
_______________________________________________
Beowulf mailing list, [email protected] sponsored by Penguin Computing
To change your subscription (digest mode or unsubscribe) visit 
http://www.beowulf.org/mailman/listinfo/beowulf

Reply via email to