Anonymous wrote:I interview a lot of college seniors every year and they all put their GPA on their resumes. I also look for it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I interview a lot of college seniors every year and they all put their GPA on their resumes. I also look for it.
But let me ask you this: would you say a 3.6 from say an Elon grad was better prepared to work for you than a 2.9 from say Georgetown? I just think there's a big difference in rigor and expectations across universities, so GPA can be hard to distinguish what a person can really do. When I look at candidates, I might consider GPA if it's there, but I look at where they graduated from and when. From there, can they write, can they communicate, are they weirdos?
I hire a lot of college grads (mostly Econ/math/compsci) and definitely look at GPA. I would prefer a 3.6 from Elon to a 2.9 at Georgetown. The candidate would need a lot of other positives or a good explanation to overcome a 2.9.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless your kid is connected or planning on attending law school, a 3.2 Economics major at is going to do better than a 3.9 Anthropology major with post-grad recruitment.
Recruitment? Well duh, anthropology majors aren’t looking for finance careers- they major in anthropology. Anthropology is a major for people interested in people based careers like social work, hr, administration.
Lots of anthro and art history majors go into consulting for big$$ at ivies and Duke and similar schools. This is not new and has been discussed many times before. From certain schools you can major in anything and end up getting hired into a high paying job. others want nonprofits or law school or phDs and that is great too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. All you need on a resume is an accurate graduation date. Include magna or summa cum laude if you earned it, but that’s it.
That's definitely not true for federal gov't. jobs, which will require a GPA no matter how long you've been working.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless your kid is connected or planning on attending law school, a 3.2 Economics major at is going to do better than a 3.9 Anthropology major with post-grad recruitment.
Recruitment? Well duh, anthropology majors aren’t looking for finance careers- they major in anthropology. Anthropology is a major for people interested in people based careers like social work, hr, administration.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. All you need on a resume is an accurate graduation date. Include magna or summa cum laude if you earned it, but that’s it.
That's definitely not true for federal gov't. jobs, which will require a GPA no matter how long you've been working.
Anonymous wrote:Freshman DC feels they are likely "average" in their class. Expecting a B+ ish grade in most courses. Big drop from GPA DC was used to HS -- but not surprising as the student body in college (Ivy) is generally high quality and competitive. Question for this group: Does this type fo GPA hold you back from strong job opportunities?
Anonymous wrote:Unless your kid is connected or planning on attending law school, a 3.2 Economics major at is going to do better than a 3.9 Anthropology major with post-grad recruitment.
Anonymous wrote:Can people on DCUM learn there's more careers than just finance? Like a lot more.
Anonymous wrote:No. All you need on a resume is an accurate graduation date. Include magna or summa cum laude if you earned it, but that’s it.
Anonymous wrote:Work on developing your peer and alumni network.
Doesn’t mean you should have a shit GPA, but if you are say finance it’s not that hard to be 3.5ish or higher.
However, the connections are far more valuable.