John do you have info on that?  And that sounds like instate rate too, no?

 

From: John Hornbuckle [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, February 07, 2008 9:07 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Certs + Experience + which degree?

 

 

I’m looking at FSU’s MIS degree. The cost is $423.53 per credit hour. Add in
books, and you’re looking at maybe $1500 per class. It looks like 11 classes
are required, for a cost of $16,500. Not too horrible. Plus, you get a tax
break on tuition costs.

 

 

 

John

 

 

From: Ziots, Edward [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, February 07, 2008 8:51 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Certs + Experience + which degree?

 

 

Good view of it. 

 

Looking at Masters in IT/Information Science also, but borrowing like 40-60K
at 8% just to get through the course, and taking Graduate Placement Exams (
MCAT? MCAP) doesn’t thrill me either. I got enough real-world experience, to
breeze through possibly ¼ to ½ the cirrcumlum for the MSIT degree ( CISSP at
most accredited colleges will count for about 12-15 credits towards the
Masters, which helps get the degree quicker) 

 

True: Running the certification rat-race does get boring after a while, but
in IT its basically the Icing on the cake in my eyes, doing the jobs,
getting the experience is really what it comes down to.  And hell my
undergrad was in Mechnical Engineering, wish they had the IT Degrees back in
my day in college, all they had was CIS ( Coding, which I loathe)

 

Z

 

Edward E. Ziots

Netwok Engineer

Lifespan Organization

MCSE,MCSA,MCP,Security+,Network+,CCA

Phone: 401-639-3505

-----Original Message-----
From: John Hornbuckle [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, February 07, 2008 8:35 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Certs + Experience + which degree?

 

 

I’ve got a young woman (early 20’s) working for me as a PC technician. The
position requires A+ and Network+ certifications, which she has. She was
commenting earlier this week that very little of what she learned in the
certification process has helped her out in the field. The things you come
across in the real world just can’t be duplicate in books. That’s not to say
that certification is useless, but we all know that certs alone aren’t worth
much.

 

I’ve got over 10 years of experience, and the only certs I have are A+,
Net+, and I-Net+. When I found myself with time to study, I didn’t go for
more certs—I finished my Bachelor’s degree (I had dropped out of college as
a junior, having already earned my AA). The next step for me is a Master’s;
I’d rather spend my time and energy on that than certs. Certs have a limited
shelf life, but degrees are forever.

 

After the Master’s, I may look into additional certs. But that will be a few
years.

 

 

John Hornbuckle

MIS Department

Taylor County School District

318 North Clark Street

Perry, FL 32347

 

www.taylor.k12.fl.us

 

 

 

 

 

From: Ziots, Edward [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, February 07, 2008 7:51 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Certs + Experience + which degree?

 

 

I can see where you are coming from, I find myself at this familiar
cross-roads. It seems that re-certification is necessary evil now, but
probably going the SSCP/CISSP ISC2 route because its vendor/neutral and it
really peaks my interest, and never gets boring. Plus it doesn’t pigeonhole
me into supporting one OS over another or one technology over another. 

 

But honestly, experience is the best teacher. How many times I have sat in a
class, and you knew the professor didn’t have much real-world experience,
and basically was teaching you the theory of how things are supposed to go,
which we both know doesn’t always work out to what it really does, when you
get down to it. 

 

Z

 

Edward E. Ziots

Netwok Engineer

Lifespan Organization

MCSE,MCSA,MCP,Security+,Network+,CCA

Phone: 401-639-3505

-----Original Message-----
From: MarvinC [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Wednesday, February 06, 2008 8:41 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Certs + Experience + which degree?

 

 

The time to study + the time to commit to hands on related work that may
intefere with studying for a masters/phd..  

I've thought about pursuing one or the other but the current work load just
allow time. Of course there's also part-time and/or online schooling as an
option. I'd say it could depend on just how much you're looking to get out
of the classes and whether you function better in a classroom or working
from home. Having the 2000/2003 MS certs I'm now having to consider tackling
the 2008 certs or make the jump to another industry platform like Cisco.
Talk about wanting to pull the covers back over my head! 

At this stage in my life I've come to the conclusion that I won't become
rich or wealthy working in this field unless I stumble across a nice patent.
I believe in the "glass ceiling" and that you can max out if you're not
constantly working to stay educated in some capacity. My fear is the same I
had when I was in college and that was that my real world experiences were
educating me a lot better than the classroom subject matter. So I figure to
work towards building some type of residual income, start another venture,
build, start etc. At that point I'd be paying for classes or subject matter
that's gonna help to keep the cycle going. If I make it back to school it'll
be because I'd have the time and flexibility. (nothing like dreaming) 
 


 

On 2/6/08, Jim Majorowicz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 

 

It depends on where you see yourself in 5 to 10 years.  Personally, I'd go
for the MBA if I had the time, even though I'd never use it.

 

From: Phil Guevara [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Wednesday, February 06, 2008 2:45 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: OT: Certs + Experience + which degree?

 

 

I was wondering what everyone's opinion is on this.

 

Let's say you have your MCSE cert or other industry standard cert and over 5
years solid experience, but no degree.

 

Which degree would be best to compliment this?

 

CIS degree, Computer Science Degree, Business Degree, other?

 

I noticed the CS program deals more with programming and not really the
stuff a systems administrator would do.  A CIS degree might be aligned with
it but wouldn't that just be redundant to the MCSE and experience?  Would a
Business degree show you as a well rounded person?

Best Regards,

Phil

 

 

 














 














 














 














 
 














 














 














 














 
 














 














 














 














 
 














 














 














 














 
 
 
    

 















 














 














 














 
 














 














 














 














 
 
 
    

 















 














 














 














 
 














 














 














 














 
 
 
    

 

 














 














 














 














 
 
 
    

 

 














 














 
 
    

 

 














 
 
    

 

 







 
    

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