| An Interview with a Recent MCS Grad | | Print | |
| Written by Tricia Borchardt |
| Tuesday, 31 March 2009 15:12 |
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My job is awesome. I'm doing pretty much exactly what I was taught in school as far as development goes. I'm using Eclipse and I am primarily doing web development using java. The most important advice I would give to every single MCS student: Get an internship BEFORE you graduate! The experience is so very, very valuable. The amount of knowledge I gained and my ability to communicate with different types of people at my internship was immense. I applied for many internships and interviewed with them all. When it came time to find my “real” job, my experience was such that I had a large pool of options to choose from. It got to the point where I felt like I was interviewing the companies rather than them interviewing me. I quite literally got to choose where I wanted to work while I heard other students complaining that there were no opportunities. I compared salaries, vacation time, holidays/company shutdowns, benefits, education reimbursement programs, etc. I feel that my ambition with my internship and the process involved in getting it was one of the main reasons I had so many options. The first step for anyone interested in pursuing this is to get a suit, a leather binder/folder, a well-written resume, and go to a career fair! Don't be lazy! Do it! Other advice; 1. GPA is a bigger factor than most students realize. Getting a high gpa in MCS is not very easy to do. 2. Seek help from your professors whenever you have any kind question, even if you consider it "stupid”. Each time that I kept my mouth shut and didn't ask that question, everything got more difficult. Projects and assignments would start to snowball and I would get further and further behind. Before I knew it, I was an assignment or two behind and still spending 30+ hours in the lab each week grinding away at my MCS projects just trying to catch up so I didn't lose anymore late points on assignments. 3. Don't procrastinate! Start your assignments, even if it’s a weak start, the day they are assigned. 4. Make friends in your MCS classes. I still talk to some of those students and it's been great for networking. |
| Last Updated on Tuesday, 31 March 2009 15:18 |
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