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Education

'What Straight-A Students Get Wrong' (nytimes.com) 372

From a story: Year after year, I watch in dismay as students obsess over getting straight A's. Some sacrifice their health; a few have even tried to sue their school after falling short. All have joined the cult of perfectionism out of a conviction that top marks are a ticket to elite graduate schools and lucrative job offers. I was one of them. I started college with the goal of graduating with a 4.0. It would be a reflection of my brainpower and willpower, revealing that I had the right stuff to succeed. But I was wrong.

The evidence is clear: Academic excellence is not a strong predictor of career excellence. Across industries, research shows that the correlation between grades and job performance is modest in the first year after college and trivial within a handful of years. For example, at Google, once employees are two or three years out of college, their grades have no bearing on their performance.

Academic grades rarely assess qualities like creativity, leadership and teamwork skills, or social, emotional and political intelligence. Yes, straight-A students master cramming information and regurgitating it on exams. But career success is rarely about finding the right solution to a problem -- it's more about finding the right problem to solve.

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'What Straight-A Students Get Wrong'

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 09, 2018 @05:51PM (#57776906)

    Obviously, they have little bearing on the real world, where you need to actually achieve, rather than regurgitate words at the professor.

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by b0s0z0ku ( 752509 )

      It depends what the exams are like. I've had questions like "given this system, if you replace part A with a component of type B instead of type A, how will the behavior of the system change under X and Y conditions. Really forced you to think, since the functions of the systems and components were mentioned in class, but how a system with DIFFERENT components would work was up to the test-taker's imagination.

      Another fun question in an engineering dynamics class. [Picture of a male elephant walking with

    • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Sunday December 09, 2018 @06:28PM (#57777114)

      Obviously, they have little bearing on the real world

      Indeed. In my entire life, this is the number of times an interviewer has asked about my GPA: 0.

      The were mainly interested in what I had done (demo with source code listing) and what I could do (whiteboard + marker).

      Even applying for grad school, an impressive undergrad independent research project will help more than a perfect GPA, especially if it was published.

      In grad school, your GPA means nothing. All anyone cares about is your research and publication record.

      High school is the only place where your GPA is really important.

      • I would correct you on one point. Your GPA in grad school DOES matter, in the sense that you are expected to get A/A- while still fulfilling your research and publication obligations.
        At least that is how it was for me during my doctorate. Not a problem as I had a 4.00 in undergraduate, and would have had a 4.00 in grad school if not for pissing off a professor in an analog IC design class.
      • by TheRaven64 ( 641858 ) on Monday December 10, 2018 @05:56AM (#57778820) Journal

        Indeed. In my entire life, this is the number of times an interviewer has asked about my GPA: 0.

        Why would they ask you? That information is normally on your CV, which will be filtered by HR drones long before you get to the interview.

  • by Quakeulf ( 2650167 ) on Sunday December 09, 2018 @05:51PM (#57776912)
    It is wrong if all you learn is to recite things and become a living database. Learning is all about fundamentals, like the right approach to any given task.

    Problem solving is apparently not taught anymore? What kind of courses were these students aiming for A in?
    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Re "learn is to recite things" is what sorts out people who can learn from people who will always need help and support to "work" for decades.
      Merit and ability can be tested for.
      A university is a place to show what a person can learn and then put that past ability to a new use.
      To support the gov/mil/NGO/brand/company/nation/project they find work with and not needing constant support.
      That their professional credentials are valid and that they can do what they can be expected to do.
      When a person with "q
      • That depends on the nature of the test. Does it merely test how well you have memorised the material? Or does it test how well you understand it, being able to apply your knowledge to new (to you) problems? When I studied EE, the professors didn’t care how well we memorised every little fact, and we were allowed to refer to the textbooks during most of the exams. Just as well, as I have the memory of a goldfish living in a bowl of cheap tequila.
        • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
          The main issue most advance nations want to ensure is the person is then able to work with the given professional credentials.
          That they are not going to make mistakes. That if the see a mistake made they understand the duty of care they have.

          That any design change approved by such a person is correct.

          Governments around the world have tried to change such academic methods for:
          Communist party members.
          Demographics
          Faith
          New ideas in education and using non academic considerations to enter further edu
    • Have you ever been through the education system? It's all about tests and exams. People love numbers, even if they don't mean anything. Nerds aren't immune from this kind of thinking, even though they think they're too smart to fall for the trap.

      Problem solving has never been taught. You can look across all the generations and see how well people problem solve. Most people's problem solving ability is just trying the same tactic over and over again until it just happens to succeed in one instance. Just a
      • Have you ever been through the education system? It's all about tests and exams. People love numbers, even if they don't mean anything. Nerds aren't immune from this kind of thinking, even though they think they're too smart to fall for the trap.

        I guess it depends on the subject matter. Basic math is the sort of subject that does very well by rote. My son came home with common core math homework, and it was bullshit - making a very simple thing like addition and subtraction mind numbingly overcomplicated.

        Problem solving has never been taught.

        Critical thinking and reality based personal finances would be good as well.

        • by The Evil Atheist ( 2484676 ) on Sunday December 09, 2018 @11:51PM (#57778010)
          The funny thing about rote, even for maths, is that kids with the propensity to be creative will think of creative ways to make the rote learning interesting. They'll find their own patterns and tricks. You can't test for that, and sometimes will act as a punishment for getting something wrong.

          It's easy to say critical thinking should be taught. But how? Just like everything else, it ends up being taught to some test. Of course, those kids who do think critically will see through the absolutely non-critically thought-out education system.

          Kids learn by example, and I fear the uncritical, uncreative, adults around them are teaching them to be the same by example.
        • Well, there are math teachers in the US that get payed to show up in TV commercials to tell parents that kids should never learn any math - tricks but only text book math like "in this book" ... holding up a school book.

          I saw videos about that but don't remember the details.

          Bottom line teachers show up in advertisements to go against math tricks like this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

          As if that would make the book they promote any better.

    • My niece was a straight A student.

      She actually couldn't change a light bulb in her room without help.

      One time, she admitted she "didn't know how many ounces were in a pound".

      She can't cook.

      She's a math teacher in high school.

      • by zkiwi34 ( 974563 )

        I wonder if you asked her about anything Math related? Probably not.

        Context is all. Most people have limited areas of expertise. Partly because they've not that much exposure to life outside a limited sphere, and partly because lots of stuff in the world simply doesn't interest them that much.

        I freely admit to not knowing how to fix much on a modern car, even though I'm a proper (not software) engineer.

        • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

          I wonder if you asked her about anything Math related? Probably not.

          Context is all. Most people have limited areas of expertise. Partly because they've not that much exposure to life outside a limited sphere, and partly because lots of stuff in the world simply doesn't interest them that much.

          I freely admit to not knowing how to fix much on a modern car, even though I'm a proper (not software) engineer.

          Mostly because diagnosing a modern car usually means plugging in an ODB-2 scanner and reading codes.

          Although people do have limited interests and areas of knowledge, I find that the smartest people tend to have more interests than average, and those interests tend to be completely unrelated to what they do for a living. Mainly, the smarter the person, the more likely he or she is to enjoy learning, which almost inevitably results in at least some breadth of understanding.

          Straight-A students overlap with th

    • Does it change the discussion if the student isn't trying but still gets straight As?

    • by fermion ( 181285 ) on Sunday December 09, 2018 @09:31PM (#57777670) Homepage Journal
      It says it right there in the article summary Some people think it is more important to solve the problem you identify rather than the problem that needs to be solved to create the product.

      Now, to be clear sometimes when creating a product, like the iPhone, it is useful to think about the problem from a different perspective. Likewise, pulling the real problem client wants to solve out of them is an artform. But it is important to work the problem, and not jjust redefine it to suit your needs.

      For instance about 20 years ago I was working on a roll you own web server. There was some data visitation code that broke for certain cases of data that were outside the arbitrary parameters the original coders set. These people redefined the problem to one they knew how to solve instead of solving the problem that needed to be solved. I have the education and the skills to actually do the research and coding to solve the real problem,

      This in fact is why people fail tests. They are taught in school that they can work an easier problem that they know and they never are going to have to go through the effort to create a solution to a novel problem,. We ate training people to work in factories or scripted technical support.

      The problem with the straight A student, in fact, is not that they are necessarily better or worse prepared to push papers or sell widgets to widget buyers. The problem is that they, unless they are very organized, focused, and precocious, likely earned their A by taking the easiest classes, by crying to administrators about how mean the teacher was anytime they got a b, and by having their parents threaten to sue. This means that why they do get a challenge in the work place, they are going to be unable to deal with it, or feel like the challenge is unfair.

      I am thinking about the devil wears prada where the protagonist has a job, and is unable to do it without constantly whining.

      A student with a low to mid b average is probably going to be a better employee.

  • Do any companies even care about grades that much? I’ve never seen any that insist on anything above a 3.0, and I suspect it’s because GPA is useless for comparing applicants across colleges. I’d probably be leery of anyone with a particularly low (say sub-2.0) GPA, past a certain point it doesn’t matter.
    • I've left my GPA off my resume for 15 years. The only job that ever asked about it was a position (as programmer) at an academic institution.

      When the interviewer started bragging to me that they didn't have to write good code, I decided not to pursue that 'opportunity'.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 09, 2018 @06:10PM (#57777002)

      Yes and no. They don't really care in terms of doing the job, but especially in STEM, it's common to slap on an arbitrary GPA cutoff for graduate positions. So if you don't have 3.7, you simply cannot apply for a certain percentage (HR literally throw applications away without reading). At 3.5 there's another cutoff. At 3, another.

      None of that is really relevant to the job, it's just "more efficient" for HR. They "need" someone with a degree, because that means they can grind the handle and meet deadlines for four years. And they "need" the best, so 3.7 must be better than 3.5 ....

      It's ridiculous, but yes, it happens. After the first job, no, nobody cares. But for that first position, absolutely.

    • by uncqual ( 836337 )

      For a fresh out, I look at GPA quite closely - but more importantly, the source of the GPA. I do like pretty close to a 4.0 GPA (depending on the school) for "in major" courses but for "out of major" courses such as that Literature course you took to satisfy general education, I will accept a 3.0 without hesitation. In fact, this gives me more information about you than a 4.0 across the board would - it's likely you really enjoyed the "in major" classes and focused on them and likely were not obsessed with

  • Stupid logic (Score:5, Insightful)

    by shilly ( 142940 ) on Sunday December 09, 2018 @05:57PM (#57776950)

    At one point, the article says, in effect, that it's unhealthy to obsess over getting straight As -- and that it's ineffective, because people like Martin Luther King and JK Rowling didn't get straight As. If it's unhealthy to give yourself a hard time pursuing straight As, it's even more unhealthy to give yourself a hard time trying to be Martin Luther King or JK Rowling -- and it's wildly less attainable.

    • My first thought was that I’d much rather be an MLK Jr than a JK Rowling... but then I realized that Rowling doesn’t have people trying to kill her and is ridiculously wealthy.

    • Meh, I was in a highschool in a rural town, no honors courses, no tiger moms, getting As wasn't that hard.
      Also I found that in college, the students who had AP credit and skipped the intro math classes actually had a more difficult time of things adjusting to the college level of difficulty cold turkey.

  • by WindBourne ( 631190 ) on Sunday December 09, 2018 @05:58PM (#57776954) Journal
    It depends on where you are working. What this person describes is political BS. That is needed at old monopolies, or none-technical companies, that have a small amount of ppl.
    In a large go-getting start-up type company, you are much better off focusing on solutions and not how you can BS.
  • I don't believe it (Score:5, Interesting)

    by DrSpock11 ( 993950 ) on Sunday December 09, 2018 @06:08PM (#57776990)

    I've worked in a company where GPAs strongly influenced hiring decisions (yes, even after years in the workforce). At that company myself and most of my colleagues had 3.5+ GPAs from top universities. I've also worked at companies where GPA and school meant zero towards the hiring process.

    The difference in the quality of personnel was stark. At the high GPA company everyone was incredibly smart, hard working, and overachieving. At the anything-goes companies, *some* people are smart and hard working, but most are just there to clock in their 9-5, get their paycheck, and put in the minimal amount of effort along the way that they can without being fired.

    • by b0s0z0ku ( 752509 ) on Sunday December 09, 2018 @06:12PM (#57777006)
      Did you ever work at a company where people were smart but still loved their work-life balance? Why do "smart" and "stays in the office till 8 pm" need to be tied together in US kultshah?
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by mrbester ( 200927 )

      I work 9-5:30 because that's what my contract stipulates. I don't get overtime, so I'm not working outside those hours. I certainly wouldn't get nebulous and meaningless "kudos" points for staying late,. If anything, there'd be eyebrows raised.

      Whether I have a CS degree or not is irrelevant (and always was). What is important is whether I can do the job I am employed for.

    • 30 years working in IT industry, can say with complete honesty the only people grades mattered was for Grad intakes, anyone else I have never seen them even looked at as they just don't matter.
      • by Okind ( 556066 )

        30 years working in IT industry, can say with complete honesty the only people grades mattered was for Grad intakes, anyone else I have never seen them even looked at as they just don't matter.

        Grades indeed don't matter. what does matter however, is what kind of education you've completed. Was it a "memorize this and you'll pass" kind of education? Vocational training? Academic education?

        In my experience, vocational training gets the most out of people given standard tasks, even for high-skilled tasks like programming, as this type of education better teaches the "how" of programming, and fast-forwards a person in their career by a few years (because it takes tat long to learn this on the job).

        Bu

    • by novakyu ( 636495 )

      It's useful as a screening tool—just because someone has 3.5+ GPA doesn't mean they will be good fit for the job (they might not have actually earned that grade; they might have earned it at a middle- to low-tier university). But not hiring people who don't at least meet that mark means you are screening out a lot of people who can't function at the level you need them to.

      But, alas, the one-percenters you describe aren't going to drive the correlations (also, there are people who don't have that GPA b

    • I'm used to seeing a minimum grade cut-off at companies and if you passed that grade it is never discussed again. It's just like the old "Hello Doctor with Honours and a mountain of certificates, do you have a Bachelor Degree? Good you have not been automatically rejected!"

  • by melted ( 227442 ) on Sunday December 09, 2018 @06:09PM (#57776996) Homepage

    >> at Google, once employees are two or three years out of college, their grades have no bearing on their performance

    Sure, if they can pass Google interviews, their grades are unlikely to have much bearing on their performance. They have a pretty serious bearing on being able to pass interviews, though, I can tell you that.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      The point is those interviews are not good indicators of potential. All those interviews seem to do is inflate the Googler's sense of importance at being a gatekeeper, when all they do has no effect on the actual quality of the people who pass the gate.
      • by melted ( 227442 )

        Or maybe they are. There are many reasons why one might have a bad GPA. Maybe they didn't pay attention initially but then really got their ass in gear. Or maybe they did a lot of stuff outside the normal curriculum to the detriment of grades. Who knows.
        My point is, the interview selects for people who can code. Proportionally speaking, there will be a lot more of those who can code among people with good academic record, and a lot more people with bad academic records will be discarded (but, crucially, not

      • by djinn6 ( 1868030 )

        I can't speak for Google, but about 30% of the people I interviewed couldn't code up a variation of FizzBuzz. I guarantee you none of those will be a net positive if hired.

        • by melted ( 227442 ) on Sunday December 09, 2018 @07:59PM (#57777432) Homepage

          I actually wouldn't "guarantee" that. Some people get anxious and can't code worth a damn in an interview. That's just how the brain works: once fight-or-flight kicks in, neocortex basically shuts down. I know because I'm one of those people. I do very well if, for whatever reason, I'm not anxious. I did well in my Google interview only because I had 2 other offers from elsewhere. I spent well over half a decade at Google doing what I think is excellent work, and perf evaluations agreed.

          I don't know how to fix this, but I can assure you that there are at least a few great coders among those who can't code FizzBuzz on the whiteboard under the stress of a typical eng interview.

          • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

            I think it's easy to fix - stop making interviews an exam.

            If a candidate has a portfolio of work, then go through their work. This is about work and career, so judge candidates based on realistic conditions.
            • by melted ( 227442 )

              How do you interview then?

            • by melted ( 227442 )

              I mean, how do you determine if candidate’s “body of work” and “qualifications” are real?

              • You get them to explain their work.
                • You get them to explain their work.

                  Doesn't work.

                  I used to believe that I could chat with someone about their work and come away with a solid idea of how good they were, but then I made some bad hires that made me realize how wrong I was. Your method does filter out the bad liars, but not the good ones. The good ones know enough to be able to explain the work, point out pros and cons, key design decisions, etc., and explain the rationale... but that is far from the same thing as meaning they could actually do the work they're describing.

            • I think it's easy to fix - stop making interviews an exam.

              I can't speak for other companies but in every hiring activity I've done the "exam" is not about the right question. We also make this clear up front and last time we ended up hiring graduates we hired one of only 2 people who got the engineering question wrong. The difference was as he was trying to solve it he was scribbling on the paper and showed perfect thought process on how to approach the problem. Ultimately he drew some components in the final picture backwards.

              I quizzed him on it on his first day

      • Where did anything indicate that? I have yet to see any study that looked at the ability of people who have passed the google interviews and compared it to the failures. The only thing this study seems to indicate is that Google seems to value education perfectly in the interview process.

  • by idji ( 984038 ) on Sunday December 09, 2018 @06:14PM (#57777020)
    theoretical physics and have had a very successful career for over 20 years.
    • by StormReaver ( 59959 ) on Sunday December 09, 2018 @06:24PM (#57777094)

      ...theoretical physics and have had a very successful career for over 20 years.

      You are probably the type of person who loves what he does, is capable of independent research to solve problems, and whose University grades have no bearing on his ability to do his job.

      You could probably have lived life more, studied less, gotten lower grades, and still be perfectly able to do your job.

      In short, you are probably just the person the article author had in mind to prove that University grades are meaningless beyond the hiring process.

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        This.

        I put out a job call and a hick from Fred, Texas came to interview. This was WAY back, OK?

        I asked him what an autoexec file (and lots of other DOS stuff) was, and he looked at me and said, "I don't know.. Do you, though?"

        I said, "Yes, I do.." He said, "Wow. I'd like to know what you know!" After a few minutes, I told him to go speak to the people out on the floor (about 25 users) while I printed some stuff.

        I got coffee and waited until he returned. I told him to wait right there. I went out to the floo

        • by djinn6 ( 1868030 )

          So... did he turn out to be the star performer on your team or the guy that always fucks things up and had to be saved by his teammates?

    • by jrumney ( 197329 )
      I think there is a big difference between someone who learns how to do things vs someone who learns how to get good marks. Both sets of students are scoring highly academically at school, but they are suited to completely different career paths. Those who study to get good marks will generally get well paid jobs at well known companies when they graduate that put them on a fast-track career path to middle management, where their prospects hit a dead end. Those who study to learn will probably choose a lowe
  • by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) on Sunday December 09, 2018 @06:16PM (#57777032) Journal

    As a former A student, the biggest thing I got wrong was never asking Peggy Blair out. She was smoking hot and she looked like she would have been a lot of fun, but I didn't think I had a shot with her. All these years later she becomes my friend on Facebook and asks me why I never asked her out, and that she liked me back then.

    I realize that there were so many times I didn't take a shot because I was a little shy and caught up in my own head and I could have been fucking like crazy if I'd only had the confidence of a guy like Kenny Jaworski, who was a jerkoff and had nothing going on but was always macking on the girls.

    That, and I wish I'd spent less time studying and more time getting high.

  • Perfectionism (Score:5, Interesting)

    by MrKaos ( 858439 ) on Sunday December 09, 2018 @06:18PM (#57777044) Journal

    Self sabotage disguised as integrity.

  • but even more important is having valid work experience in your field of study.

    Some technical schools require a year of Co-op blocks with paid employment at external companies. Some additionally require a senior project for graduation.

    If you're a pre-med student, or pre-law student, well that's another kettle of fish.

  • >"Academic excellence is not a strong predictor of career excellence."

    I can tell you that when I hire (which is rare, but still relevant), I don't care about grades AT ALL. I really don't care which University either (as long as it is not mail-order). It does matter which degree, depending on the position, but not as much as most people would expect.

    I am far more interested in things like: Where they have worked and for how long, what experience they have, their personality, their interests (in or out

  • GPA is only marginally about intelligence. It is mostly about being able to identify and fulfill expectations, combined with a decision that grades matter. In hiring, I want someone that I think could get a 4.0 if they decided it was important, but honestly when doing recruiting, I haven't always looked at the GPA on the resume; what matters is having skills that go beyond the basic curriculum to make the candidate stand out. My favorite interview question for programming positions is to ask about projec

  • So what is the author's advice? Do not seek good grades?
  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Sunday December 09, 2018 @06:40PM (#57777166)
    e.g. her 300 level courses. There were 400 qualified kids (3.8 GPA or higher, not sure how many more below that) and 200 slots. It was a minor miracle she got in even with a 4.0 because she didn't have much volunteering and no sports or job experience (she had a job lined up sophomore year but couldn't take it because she had to take extra credit hours of classes to qualify for her grants and loans).

    Kid's aren't fighting for a 4.0 for top schools anymore. 30 years of nonstop state & federal funding cuts mean they're fighting for spots in regular public Universities. This is what happens when you've got a winner take all, survival of the fittest economy. What pisses me off is how few people acknowledge it. There are literally tens of thousands, if not millions of parents with kids in college. Do you all just not talk to your kids?
  • "...career success is rarely about finding the right solution to a problem -- it's more about finding the right problem to solve."

    Finding the right problem?

    The very capitalism that drives careers thrives in pimping materialistic shit products packed full of features we never asked for and didn't want, to fill a need that doesn't really exist.

    Consumers buy solutions to non-problems all the damn time. If someone ever did find the "right" problem, they would probably be fired.

  • by sweet 'n sour ( 595166 ) on Sunday December 09, 2018 @07:08PM (#57777264)
    Caveats:
    Science related degree related to the job
    Highly ranked college

    The GPA may not say much about success, but in order to be successful, having a high GPA means you at least get to try.

    > For example, at Google, once employees are two or three years out of college, their grades have no bearing on their performance.

    How many 2.0 GPA hires do you think Google has?
    • How many 2.0 GPA hires do you think Google has?

      /me raises hand.

      High school GPA was < 2.0. College was better, but not great. I know another Google engineer who never finished high school. I know another who finished her associate's degree with a 2.0 GPA.

  • by Chewbacon ( 797801 ) on Sunday December 09, 2018 @07:11PM (#57777278)

    My company hires a lot of "kids" right out of engineering school. These kids are smart, don't get me wrong, but they come out looking for more grades as school is all they've ever known. There is a transition from this to the real world and the academic community fails to prepare many of them (if any) for this. A quick "A+" and closure to whatever challenge they just met, while the rest of us know things aren't that simple, may take years of work, and even then the overall, multi-faceted success may have some facets of failure. So many don't seem to get this.

    • True. This is what a good mentoring program is for. Computer science and software engineering don't have formal apprenticeship programs, and the informal ones are _invaluable_.

  • School is wrong ... (Score:5, Informative)

    by CaptainDork ( 3678879 ) on Sunday December 09, 2018 @07:12PM (#57777280)

    ... because everyone is taught the same shit.

    That's OK for elementary, but by middle school (junior high), it's time to recognize people's passions and aptitudes and steer them down that or those lanes.

    A friend with kids asked me if the kids should learn code. I said, absolutely not. Expose them to it and see if that take the bait. If not, try different bait.

    As an analogy (not car), I told him that some parents force their kids to learn how to play the piano. Know how many good pianists there are? Not many.

    Forcing kids to take code is a good way to piss them off and never forgive you for being stupid.

    And if a kid like the violin, buy them one and the lessons to go with it.

    • by Kjella ( 173770 )

      Learning "to code" as in C# or Java syntax is just a skill. Breaking down a problem to a set of precise instructions to complete a task is fantastic general tool. For example if you ask someone to find the sum of all numbers from 1 to 100, being able to create pseudo-code like:

      sum = 0;
      for i in sequence(1,100)
      sum + i;
      return sum;

      and realizing this is the same as 1+2+3+4+5+....+100 is the key to saving tons of tedious work. It may seem trivial to us, but you have to more or less ru

  • I'll admit that I've never seen a 4.0 average for anyone I interviewed, except for schools that grade on a 5.0 scale. If they received poor grades in subjects we were hiring for, I did ask why. If they were constantly on the edge of flunking out, and didn't have an _amazing_ excuse, I'd turn them down on the basis of having poor task management skills. Conversely, I made a job offer to a recent graduate who got a C in object oriented programming courses because he kept looking at lower levels of abstraction

  • by NotSoHeavyD3 ( 1400425 ) on Monday December 10, 2018 @12:11AM (#57778100) Journal
    to go to the parties. Getting A's there is less important than networking. Actually in a lot of schools it's more important to network than to get A's.
  • by Hognoxious ( 631665 ) on Monday December 10, 2018 @01:40AM (#57778344) Homepage Journal

    Yes, straight-A students master cramming information and regurgitating it on exams.

    Maybe if you're doing underwater basketweaving at somewhere like DeVry.

    But career success is rarely about finding the right solution to a problem -- it's more about finding the right problem to solve.

    Perhaps for a handful of entrepreneurs & visionaries. Not for the majority of jobs. If I'm a plumber I need to solve the problem of finding & fixing the leak. If I'm an ER doctor I need to solve the problem of the patient in front of me bleeding out. If I'm a programmer on a stock control system that can't convert stones to kilograms I need to solve the problem of where & how to multiply (or is it divide?) by 6.356.

  • Prioritization is critical in any real-world project. You never have the resources or time to make it perfect. You always have some parts that need to be as close to perfect as possible and others that do not. And you have do deal competently with having a shifting situation priority-wise.

    Prioritization is something that requires to many guestimates that it can only be learned by experience. Hence I submit that the straight-A people lose their edge and may even be falling behind when experience accumulates

  • by aleksander suur ( 4765615 ) on Monday December 10, 2018 @04:21AM (#57778624)
    The problem with straight-A students is that they put a whole lot of effort into drilling tests and exams to perfection, but hardly learn more than B or even C students. It's still the same curriculum, just performed to higher standard. You'll get better results, if you put that above and beyond effort into learning things that actually go above and beyond the curriculum. You'll still get ok grades, just not straight A-s, at the same time you learn more things than your classmates, but you don't get grades for it.
  • by RogueWarrior65 ( 678876 ) on Monday December 10, 2018 @10:27AM (#57779938)

    At companies started by the C students.

The 11 is for people with the pride of a 10 and the pocketbook of an 8. -- R.B. Greenberg [referring to PDPs?]

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