Anonymous wrote:I work at a law firm. Some people put their GPA on their resume and some don't. Obviously trying to get into law school, that and LSAT's matter. But to get a job after? Not needed.
bullcrap. Joint owner of a company and we were all A students most from top universities.Anonymous wrote:The A students work for the B students, the C students own the businesses, and the D students dedicate the buildings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, and those who say otherwise are perpetuating a massive lie. Especially if you want a good internship to set you up for an elite career, you will need a high gpa. People will always say you need "experience." Well, that experience requires a good gpa to actually get the dang position.
Not really true. I had an actual job during college. I worked at a major bank and then VISA. I got into a prestigious training program out of college with a low GPA as I had actual work experience. Ironically you need a high GPA to get internships but not to be an employee at 18-20.
At work we just hired an EVP who is 34. Prior job was SVP. He has 16 years banking experience. He started work full time at 18 and did college at night. You dont need the internship if you already have the job.
No one will give and engineering student an engineering job to work at while they are in school. Even the non college degree jobs like working in a garage which could work for mechanical E maybe require some training.
Sure, you could work for a professor in a lab, but unless you really hit it off with them you will still have to apply for those jobs against people who have higher gas.
Anonymous wrote:Undergraduate 3.67 Religion.
Graduate Community Planning 4.0
Can't find a job to save my life.
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?
Anonymous wrote:Undergraduate 3.67 Religion.
Graduate Community Planning 4.0
Can't find a job to save my life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, and those who say otherwise are perpetuating a massive lie. Especially if you want a good internship to set you up for an elite career, you will need a high gpa. People will always say you need "experience." Well, that experience requires a good gpa to actually get the dang position.
Not really true. I had an actual job during college. I worked at a major bank and then VISA. I got into a prestigious training program out of college with a low GPA as I had actual work experience. Ironically you need a high GPA to get internships but not to be an employee at 18-20.
At work we just hired an EVP who is 34. Prior job was SVP. He has 16 years banking experience. He started work full time at 18 and did college at night. You dont need the internship if you already have the job.
No one will give and engineering student an engineering job to work at while they are in school. Even the non college degree jobs like working in a garage which could work for mechanical E maybe require some training.
Sure, you could work for a professor in a lab, but unless you really hit it off with them you will still have to apply for those jobs against people who have higher gas.