My comments are based on my experience within AT&T where I provide
technical interviews as well as review technical promotions, other
companies may very well differ...
> "Long, Steven @ Atlanta Galleria" wrote:
> What are the prospects in obtaining a job after this course has been
> completed?
One course is not going to do much for your marketability.
>
> With my experience (4yrs) what kind of work can I expect? And how much
> pay?
Pay is based on a couple of things here: experience, education,
additional training. 4 years experience is not enought to determine how
much you would be paid.
>
> How much demand is there for a system admin?
Here there's not a huge demand, but for a person with technical
skills/education/training/experience there are opportunities in other
areas.
>
> In short, what doors will this open for me?
One course, very few.
>
> In reference to the comments about semester courses and straight
> classes,
> I have not taken a semester class that can move as fast as I can
> learn.
I would say you've not gone to the proper educational facility or you
have not advanced to the more difficult courses.
> And all of them contain information repeated from other classes, and
> filler data that is useless.
> They waste my time giving me computer history that every other class
> in computers does and hand
> out only enough information to stretch the class over 3 months.
This description sounds like many freshman intro courses. In this case
you are correct. The more advanced courses are not going to repeat
previous information, but build upon it. Do you have a college degree?
I'd suggest that GA Tech would present a number of challenging and
useful courses.
I attended Emory a while back in pursuit of a MS in Math/Comp. Sci. I
can tell you that the courses I took there provided very little in the
way of 'computer history' and enough of a challenge and information to
make that 3 months feel pretty full.
> Real experience is what counts and
> finding solutions to problems that are not in any book is what really
> matters. That sort of thing cannot be done in a classroom.
Real experience does count, but you are wrong about not getting this
kind of experience in a classroom. Again, I suspect you've not attended
the proper University, or not given it enough time. From the
perspective of AT&T, a BS will get you a hell of a lot more then 4 years
of experience. You can apply that logic to the advanced degrees as
well.
>
> In addition, College classes just cannot keep up with the constant
> change in the computer industry.
> By the time a semester is over, the course subject can become history
> before anyone can master it.
I doubt that is accurate. I'd say that if you took a sys admin class on
Linux, say, 5 years ago, much of that information would still be useful
and valid. A class that teaches you programming concepts 15 years ago
is still useful now. You should have built on that between then and
now, but it's still useful. Although you apparently have an adversion
to the formal University education, it is the ticket to get you in the
door, at AT&T anyway.
--
Until later: Geoffrey                ">esoteric@denali.atlnet.com
I'm afraid there will be more problems with W2K then there were with
Y2K...
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