Anonymous wrote:As a member of recruiting at an engineering firm, I assure you we do look at the whole package but a GPA below 2.9 is a red flag. We wouldn't even consider a candidate with a GPA of 2.5 and under. Everyone assumes GPAs do not matter, just the degree. Not true and it doesn't matter what year you graduated. Of course, life experiences can easily overtake a low GPA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS switched specialties within the Engineering School and that helped a lot. Would that help? Some specialties are much harder than others (ChemE).
You think ChemE is the easiest? or the hardest?
Hardest. By a long shot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:College boards on reddit are full of engineering kids with awful GPAs struggling to get call backs and jobs. "Interview went well, I thought, but then they brought up my GPA..." sort of stuff.
It's a giant red flag. Why would a hiring manager risk their own skin to hire some kid who's a liability?
I don't know where you are exactly but here in the DMV, there are plenty of engineering kids with awful GPAs but they have AWS cloud certifications. I can guarantee that those kids have no shortage for getting high paying IT jobs, especially in the gov. contracting sector.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t believe any of you are actual engineers.
I think they are disgruntled kids whose GPAs weren't what they wanted.
It is important to remember that half of all students are in the bottom half of the class. They go on to good lives. Even the engineers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:College boards on reddit are full of engineering kids with awful GPAs struggling to get call backs and jobs. "Interview went well, I thought, but then they brought up my GPA..." sort of stuff.
It's a giant red flag. Why would a hiring manager risk their own skin to hire some kid who's a liability?
I don't know where you are exactly but here in the DMV, there are plenty of engineering kids with awful GPAs but they have AWS cloud certifications. I can guarantee that those kids have no shortage for getting high paying IT jobs, especially in the gov. contracting sector.
Define "awful" GPA. And are the awful GPA kids white... or female/URM?
Anonymous wrote:I don’t believe any of you are actual engineers.
Anonymous wrote:The "let them find their own way" is such Psychology Today bull****. Most kids if left to their own devices will just piss your money away on the easiest degree and party. Then you can have fun paying their rent through their 20s and for the grad degree they'll need when it finally clicks in their 20s that their BA was so damn easy because it was essentially worthless.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:College boards on reddit are full of engineering kids with awful GPAs struggling to get call backs and jobs. "Interview went well, I thought, but then they brought up my GPA..." sort of stuff.
It's a giant red flag. Why would a hiring manager risk their own skin to hire some kid who's a liability?
I don't know where you are exactly but here in the DMV, there are plenty of engineering kids with awful GPAs but they have AWS cloud certifications. I can guarantee that those kids have no shortage for getting high paying IT jobs, especially in the gov. contracting sector.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS switched specialties within the Engineering School and that helped a lot. Would that help? Some specialties are much harder than others (ChemE).
You think ChemE is the easiest? or the hardest?