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by el_benhameen
3448 days ago
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>Already had a CS degree from a prestigious school. I do not. I'm self-taught and considering the online MS for the purpose of signaling that my skills are legitimate (and filling in some theoretical gaps). As a hiring manager, would this change the value of an MS in your eyes? Or still unimportant compared to projects? |
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With a non-tech BS degree, all too few HR departments (esp in bigger companies) will invite you interview for a software job. Without the CS degree, I was a pariah with very limited prospects. Frankly I doubt that POV has changed appreciably, even after 27 years. Business-men/women are a conservative lot. They take as little risk as possible. If you lack credentials, they hire you, and you fail... they look bad and have a hard time explaining why they hired you. But if you had a relevant tech degree, their ass has far better cover.
Of course, if you already have a BS in CS, I can't speak to the value of adding a MS. Even when I earned mine, the incremental added value beyond the BS wasn't overwhelming. But some employers care more for advanced degrees than others. Uncle Sam and most large companies automatically kick you into a higher salary bracket if you have one.
It also doesn't hurt if the school granting your MS is renowned. Aside from silicon valley (apparently), I suspect 95% of employers will be very positively impressed by a degree from GT. I know several employers responded favorably over the years to the mere fact I had a degree from Johns Hopkins. Like it or not, your alma mater often matters.