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Rank: Senior Student Groups: Member
Joined: 3/6/2008 Posts: 52 Location: British Columbia
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I am genuinely curious as to why people say that where you get your Bachelor's degree does not matter. Enlightenment would be appreciated! UBC Bachelor of Science 2012 — Major in Computer Science
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 Rank: Student Body Vice-President Groups: Member
Joined: 3/6/2008 Posts: 723 Location: Ottawa, ON.
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Because it's only an undergraduate degree? And you've basically got the same knowledge anyways?
Carleton University Class of 2012, Honours Bachelor of Arts
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 Rank: Student Body President Groups: Member
Joined: 3/4/2008 Posts: 1,108 Location: Ottawa
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There is not that big of a difference in quality among Canadian schools (there is, from what I hear, a much bigger range among American schools) Now, I wouldn't exactly say that it "doesn't matter". But that is more from the perspective of making the right choice for yourself; I am very happy that I chose to go to a smaller school for my undergrad, and I do not think I would be where I am today had I gone to some big impersonal school.
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 Rank: Senior Student Groups: Member
Joined: 4/5/2008 Posts: 89 Location: Waterloo
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because experience will always trump education.
If you have relevant work experience, no one will care where you graduated from.
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Rank: Valedictorian Groups: Member
Joined: 3/5/2008 Posts: 528 Location: London (UWO)
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^ Building on that... my first-year psych prof told us at the end of the course that she forgot like 90%+ of the stuff she learned in undergrad. At the time, I didn't believe her; I for some reason thought that after I learned something so many times, that it would become locked in my memory. Now I know that that is hardly the case. You learn a lot of stuff on the job, so, yeah, it makes perfect sense that employers value experience over education.
If given a choice of a recent grad from UofT versus a recent grad from Thompson Rivers (assuming neither has any relevant job experience), most employers will choose the UofT graduate. BUT 5-10 years down the road, work experience will definitely trump education, and the employer would likely care less which university the applicant attended. Not to mention that where one attends post-undergraduate studies will outweigh where that person attends undergrad studies, and it truly is not that important where you go to do your undergrad.
Honours BMSc Specialization in Medical Science UWO '09 Bachelor of Pharmacy Alberta '13 ???
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 Rank: Senior Student Groups: Member
Joined: 3/10/2008 Posts: 67
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Kaylya wrote:I am very happy that I chose to go to a smaller school for my undergrad Acadia, I assume? Are you Nova Scotian or did Wolfville just knock you off your feet?
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