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Yes, you could do your job without a degree. But you would miss so many keg parties.
Seriously though, the degree will cover more than the dba concepts and methodologies. It will give you insight on accounting, marketing, engineering, etc, etc. This will help you more in the long run than in the short run. Understanding about general business will help you get that dreaded management position a little easier than sticking with the dba only methodogy.
Doug
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Having a degree does not ensure anything like:
-- Ability
-- Knowledge
-- Comptenance
I say this becuase, of my past experience. I was primarily Java developer before being a full-time DBA (OK I still do some Java). When I was a programmer, I saw and repaired many projects by people with degrees. So, these people got the degree to get the money. They really did not care about their career and it showed in what they created.
But, a degree does open doors to a future like:
-- Project Management
-- Senior Position (i.e Sr. DBA)
-- or a career change
I am 30 and I am going to get my degree in CS and maybe a Masters in MIS.
______________________
Applications come and go,
but the data remains!
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Here is my 2 cents. I think having a degree is important simply because you can train a monkey to do things but you can't train a monkey to think. I think most universities these days teach their students learn how to think (analytical skills). If you want to learn technicals skills go to technical college or get some technical books. Given the demand in the IT industry in the last couple of years , I don't think you need a degree to get an IT job (but i think it's easier to get a job w/ a degree). For other industries or professionals (e.g Petroleum, Biotech) you can't go far without a degree.
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Originally posted by Zaggy
I saw and repaired many projects by people with degrees.
You should also remember No baby walks the moment it was born!
Originally posted by Zaggy
So, these people got the degree to get the money.
Isn't that the final moto of every individual,including you and me.
Ability: Every individual posses it. Intrest is the match that is needed to get it to light.
Knowledge: It is some thing you acquire on the road and widen it on the course of your journy of learning. ( No baby that talks the moment it was born. It is the nurture and teaching that make him/her to learn to talk)
Competence: Its the environment that builds it.
Every individual in this world posses all these capabilities.
Too much of philosophy!!!
Sam
[Edited by sambavan on 09-25-2001 at 03:28 PM]
Thanx
Sam
Life is a journey, not a destination!
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Originally posted by Zaggy
Having a degree does not ensure anything like:
-- Ability
-- Knowledge
-- Comptenance
The same could be said about people without a degree :-)
In my opinion, academically educated people (computer science, maths, etc.) make often better Oracle DBAs since they comprehend easier the theoretical aspects of Oracle: normalization, Cartesian products, etc.
You could get the Orracle experience without a degree, you could create many users, tablespaces, perform hot, cold, warm, whatever backups but you will always lack something on a much deeper level.
I am 30 and I am going to get my degree in CS and maybe a Masters in MIS.
Good luck!
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Originally posted by tamilselvan
I hereby give a honorable degree (let him choose a subject) to Fraze.
I'd like a degree in Efective Methods of Winning the Lottery please!
Many thanks for the responses. To be honest I think it'd be an idea to go ahead and complete a degree for many of the reason cited by you all. Even though I'm nearly OCP qualifed (a different argument about the worth of it!) and have a solid DBA role, I do definately lack a deeper understanding that I think a degree would provide. Now I'll have to try and persuade the boss (and the wife :-) ) thats its worth the investment of time and money!!
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Fraze,
Please understand me correctly. I am NOT against you obtaining a degree in any subject. I completed BS (Maths) and MS (Statistics) in 1981. There was no exclusive computer science courses in 70s and early 80s. At that time, only 2 months courses on BASIC , FORTRAN and COBOL were available. Candidates who attended for the programming posts were purely tested on their mathematical skills. Since I was very much interested in programming in early 80s, I bought all the available computer books and learned the subjects. I did not go to college to study computer science. After I started working with the computer, I learned more.
Today, Computer Science is a big field. You can find 4 years degree course all over the world. If you have already a degree in Business Management, that will help you to become a Manager or higher level. What I see is you are moving away from management career to technical career.
Good Luck.
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Earning a degree is an important accomplishment, but all too often, it does not reflect a candidate's level of motivation. In the US, grade inflation is rampant and the "pay your fee and get your B" philosophy is too common. A degree in Computer Science, Engineering, or the hard sciences isn't easy.
In my opinion, one can get a reasonable assessment of a candidate's ability, knowledge and experience from interviews and references. Motivation and dedication are hard to determine though.
David Knight
OCP DBA 8i, 9i, 10g
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What role do you believe a degree plays in the current IT job market, and have you observed any shifts in the industry's perspective on formal education over the years?
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