Microsoft Certifications...Need em? How many? Why?
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fordc03 wrote:
Do you need a certification?
Yes, in the same way a degree helps to prove what you're worth.
Tina Farrell, a 23 year old thicky from Levenshulme, Manchester.
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fordc03 wrote:
Do you need a certification?
No, not really, even though I have a few up my sleeves(MCP, MCAD and several OpenText certs)
fordc03 wrote:
some kind of twisted torcher in my opinion.
did you mean torture? But yes, the MCAD ones were rather unrelated to the concepts that you were supposed to be digesting while reading the material. Very little emphasis on practical issues. I'm not saying they're totally worthless, no, but then again they're not all that either, at least the Microsoft ones. Besides, if you know how to code/administer/manage whatever it is your job demands, then you know your stuff and you're recognized by your peers/coworkers/bosses and what not.
"Programming today is a race between software engineers striving to build bigger and better idiot-proof programs, and the Universe trying to produce bigger and better idiots. So far, the Universe is winning." - Rick Cook "There is no wealth like knowledge, no poverty like ignorance." Ali ibn Abi Talib "Animadvertistine, ubicumque stes, fumum recta in faciem ferri?"
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Certifications just prove you are capable of memorization. Without a deep and complete understanding of why a developer is just a lemming marching towards a cliff doing what the book said to do.
Need a C# Consultant? I'm available.
Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know. -- Ernest Hemingway -
Certifications just prove you are capable of memorization. Without a deep and complete understanding of why a developer is just a lemming marching towards a cliff doing what the book said to do.
Need a C# Consultant? I'm available.
Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know. -- Ernest HemingwayI don't fully agree. You can say that about any degree: college, universities and that wouldn't be quite accurate. The problem is that tests from organizations like TestKing somehow have the questions and the answers of these certs, thus offering people the possibility of memorizing their way through. I have an MCP in ASP.NET and some of the questions I got during the test were quite dumb, like "Where in the menu can you find the option for ...", which has nothing to do with ASP.NET. Now if there were actually questions that represented real ASP.NET situations like creating controls dynamically, leveraging the capabilities of client side/server side, etc, these certifications would probably worth more. Of course having the answers to the questions available on the internet should be out of the question. MS should manage this better. It's not that they don't worth anything, it's just that they don't worth much, because people were able to cheat their way through.
Last modified: 2mins after originally posted --
Cheers, Mircea "Pay people peanuts and you get monkeys" - David Ogilvy
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So, a co-worker and I got into a discussion...Do you need a certification? Personally, I find mine very valuable. What say you? My goal I think is to have the right to say, "I survived the Microsoft onslaught." Why? I have 8 Microsoft Certifications and 1 CompTIA certification. All received since 2003. and in the next 3 months I will probly go take the .Net 2.0 cert tests just to add those... Obnoxious? Possibly. =) But I do think for me, taking the tests solidifies what I learned. AND...to battle the statements "The questions aren't relevant!" I believe that they are relevant to a point. not whether it's right or wrong, but that it's a solution for which the product can be used to solve...not whether it's the best one or not either. Also, to make a quick note...I believe that the current certifications since 2003 are more relevant than in years past. Personally, I feel the most valuable certs have been the Windows Server 2003 exams and the SQL Server 2005 exams. The MCAD, MCSD certs were just some kind of twisted torcher in my opinion. =) I'm hoping the .Net 2.0 certifications are much more revelant than it's predecessor. :) Christopher Ford
Personally, I don't go for certs for myself or my contractors/employees. In all honesty the first thing I look for is experience followed by references and education. If all the candidate has to offer are certs then they don't make the cut.
My Blog A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects. - -Lazarus Long
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So, a co-worker and I got into a discussion...Do you need a certification? Personally, I find mine very valuable. What say you? My goal I think is to have the right to say, "I survived the Microsoft onslaught." Why? I have 8 Microsoft Certifications and 1 CompTIA certification. All received since 2003. and in the next 3 months I will probly go take the .Net 2.0 cert tests just to add those... Obnoxious? Possibly. =) But I do think for me, taking the tests solidifies what I learned. AND...to battle the statements "The questions aren't relevant!" I believe that they are relevant to a point. not whether it's right or wrong, but that it's a solution for which the product can be used to solve...not whether it's the best one or not either. Also, to make a quick note...I believe that the current certifications since 2003 are more relevant than in years past. Personally, I feel the most valuable certs have been the Windows Server 2003 exams and the SQL Server 2005 exams. The MCAD, MCSD certs were just some kind of twisted torcher in my opinion. =) I'm hoping the .Net 2.0 certifications are much more revelant than it's predecessor. :) Christopher Ford
I never took any Microsoft exams, but I interviewed many who had them for networking and they were no indication of anything relevant whatsoever. I did take the Novell CNE exames for networking, they were expensive and ultimately pointless except for the sole benefit that as we had two CNE's in our shop we got leads from Novell at the time (something like that). I learned more on the job than they ever taught in any school.
More people died from worry than ever bled to death. - RAH
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See...I agree! =) However, the surveys say I'm wasting my time...they even said that non-cert people are getting paid more than cert people...Who buys those lies?! :)
Yes it is true that some non-cert are getting higher pays. It's because instead of the certification they can boast about the experience they have in their previous works. Which is actually reasonably enough for most companies to pay them on a high amount. Just think about it if who will an employer pay higher, someone with 5 years and 15+ projects under his/her belt; or someone with a 1 year 5+ certification exams passed? Not saying I'm against it though, just enough balance with experience and use certifications to your leverage. BTW, I also have 2 certification exams passed but experience is still a heavier factor.
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Certifications just prove you are capable of memorization. Without a deep and complete understanding of why a developer is just a lemming marching towards a cliff doing what the book said to do.
Need a C# Consultant? I'm available.
Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know. -- Ernest HemingwayMajority of it is memorization. But there would still be a need of a certain understanding though not as deep. Some certifications require technical exams which requires you to fill in the blanks of a sample application's code and output, so no memorization in that. :)
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So, a co-worker and I got into a discussion...Do you need a certification? Personally, I find mine very valuable. What say you? My goal I think is to have the right to say, "I survived the Microsoft onslaught." Why? I have 8 Microsoft Certifications and 1 CompTIA certification. All received since 2003. and in the next 3 months I will probly go take the .Net 2.0 cert tests just to add those... Obnoxious? Possibly. =) But I do think for me, taking the tests solidifies what I learned. AND...to battle the statements "The questions aren't relevant!" I believe that they are relevant to a point. not whether it's right or wrong, but that it's a solution for which the product can be used to solve...not whether it's the best one or not either. Also, to make a quick note...I believe that the current certifications since 2003 are more relevant than in years past. Personally, I feel the most valuable certs have been the Windows Server 2003 exams and the SQL Server 2005 exams. The MCAD, MCSD certs were just some kind of twisted torcher in my opinion. =) I'm hoping the .Net 2.0 certifications are much more revelant than it's predecessor. :) Christopher Ford
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So, a co-worker and I got into a discussion...Do you need a certification? Personally, I find mine very valuable. What say you? My goal I think is to have the right to say, "I survived the Microsoft onslaught." Why? I have 8 Microsoft Certifications and 1 CompTIA certification. All received since 2003. and in the next 3 months I will probly go take the .Net 2.0 cert tests just to add those... Obnoxious? Possibly. =) But I do think for me, taking the tests solidifies what I learned. AND...to battle the statements "The questions aren't relevant!" I believe that they are relevant to a point. not whether it's right or wrong, but that it's a solution for which the product can be used to solve...not whether it's the best one or not either. Also, to make a quick note...I believe that the current certifications since 2003 are more relevant than in years past. Personally, I feel the most valuable certs have been the Windows Server 2003 exams and the SQL Server 2005 exams. The MCAD, MCSD certs were just some kind of twisted torcher in my opinion. =) I'm hoping the .Net 2.0 certifications are much more revelant than it's predecessor. :) Christopher Ford
I've just started on one. Few reasons, firstly, my company is willing to pay for the resources and exams, and to allocate some time for me to spend learning/revising. Secondly, our company is looking to become an MS partner and apparently you need MS certified folks to make this happen (or make it easier, not sure). And lastly, although most jobs I see don't ask for certs, after spending the time reviewing the different aspects of the MCPD-EAD, it should expose me to some areas of .NET where I haven't spent much time, and also help polish up in other areas. This can only be a good thing for my current job, and of course if I need to get another job. I figure the timing is about right, getting the certs for .NET 2.0 now should make the extra work required for .NET 3.0/3.5 easier in a few years time (when all the dust has settled).
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Majority of it is memorization. But there would still be a need of a certain understanding though not as deep. Some certifications require technical exams which requires you to fill in the blanks of a sample application's code and output, so no memorization in that. :)
very true! Dumps are already there online, one can see and try to get 900 above out of 1000.
Jwalant Natvarlal Soneji
BE IT, India -
I never took any Microsoft exams, but I interviewed many who had them for networking and they were no indication of anything relevant whatsoever. I did take the Novell CNE exames for networking, they were expensive and ultimately pointless except for the sole benefit that as we had two CNE's in our shop we got leads from Novell at the time (something like that). I learned more on the job than they ever taught in any school.
More people died from worry than ever bled to death. - RAH
This is difficult to say, certification is good or not.If you will learn all materials by yourself you have very good knowledge. I think that Microsoft has very good books for exams training programs. But, for example, I'll read these books, but won't go to the special courses, because they're very expensive. What do we have now? If you want to pass an examination, you can simple download brain dumps, read them and pass exam. I think that this is very stupid idea, these guys will not have good knowledge after that. Why spend time? I can't understand. For example, I will not spend time for this, because this is stupid...
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Certifications just prove you are capable of memorization. Without a deep and complete understanding of why a developer is just a lemming marching towards a cliff doing what the book said to do.
Need a C# Consultant? I'm available.
Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know. -- Ernest Hemingway -
Certifications just prove you are capable of memorization. Without a deep and complete understanding of why a developer is just a lemming marching towards a cliff doing what the book said to do.
Need a C# Consultant? I'm available.
Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know. -- Ernest HemingwayEnnis Ray Lynch, Jr. wrote:
Certifications just prove you are capable of memorization
Well, I've got 5 certs and I have a really poor memory. I sat through the exams and worked everything out. Therefore your statement in my case is false.
Ennis Ray Lynch, Jr. wrote:
Without a deep and complete understanding of why a developer is just a lemming marching towards a cliff doing what the book said to do.
For someone, like me, with a poor memory I do need a deep understanding. And I object to being called a lemming.
Upcoming FREE developer events: * Glasgow: SQL Server Managed Objects AND Reporting Services ... My website
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I don't fully agree. You can say that about any degree: college, universities and that wouldn't be quite accurate. The problem is that tests from organizations like TestKing somehow have the questions and the answers of these certs, thus offering people the possibility of memorizing their way through. I have an MCP in ASP.NET and some of the questions I got during the test were quite dumb, like "Where in the menu can you find the option for ...", which has nothing to do with ASP.NET. Now if there were actually questions that represented real ASP.NET situations like creating controls dynamically, leveraging the capabilities of client side/server side, etc, these certifications would probably worth more. Of course having the answers to the questions available on the internet should be out of the question. MS should manage this better. It's not that they don't worth anything, it's just that they don't worth much, because people were able to cheat their way through.
Last modified: 2mins after originally posted --
Cheers, Mircea "Pay people peanuts and you get monkeys" - David Ogilvy
Mircea Grelus wrote:
It's not that they don't worth anything, it's just that they don't worth much, because people were able to cheat their way through.
Well put.
Nobody can give you wiser advice than yourself. - Cicero .·´¯`·->ßRÅhmmÃ<-·´¯`·.
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So, a co-worker and I got into a discussion...Do you need a certification? Personally, I find mine very valuable. What say you? My goal I think is to have the right to say, "I survived the Microsoft onslaught." Why? I have 8 Microsoft Certifications and 1 CompTIA certification. All received since 2003. and in the next 3 months I will probly go take the .Net 2.0 cert tests just to add those... Obnoxious? Possibly. =) But I do think for me, taking the tests solidifies what I learned. AND...to battle the statements "The questions aren't relevant!" I believe that they are relevant to a point. not whether it's right or wrong, but that it's a solution for which the product can be used to solve...not whether it's the best one or not either. Also, to make a quick note...I believe that the current certifications since 2003 are more relevant than in years past. Personally, I feel the most valuable certs have been the Windows Server 2003 exams and the SQL Server 2005 exams. The MCAD, MCSD certs were just some kind of twisted torcher in my opinion. =) I'm hoping the .Net 2.0 certifications are much more revelant than it's predecessor. :) Christopher Ford
The Microsoft Certification is like asking the inmates to run the asylum! As an employer (and SW engineer) rather candidates had spent time on a good basic engineering degree and learn how to learn - everything flows from that. Should add nothing wrong with going on a specific course to bootstrap a new technology learn - but an exam does little to prove capability, experience does that…... Bob
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So, a co-worker and I got into a discussion...Do you need a certification? Personally, I find mine very valuable. What say you? My goal I think is to have the right to say, "I survived the Microsoft onslaught." Why? I have 8 Microsoft Certifications and 1 CompTIA certification. All received since 2003. and in the next 3 months I will probly go take the .Net 2.0 cert tests just to add those... Obnoxious? Possibly. =) But I do think for me, taking the tests solidifies what I learned. AND...to battle the statements "The questions aren't relevant!" I believe that they are relevant to a point. not whether it's right or wrong, but that it's a solution for which the product can be used to solve...not whether it's the best one or not either. Also, to make a quick note...I believe that the current certifications since 2003 are more relevant than in years past. Personally, I feel the most valuable certs have been the Windows Server 2003 exams and the SQL Server 2005 exams. The MCAD, MCSD certs were just some kind of twisted torcher in my opinion. =) I'm hoping the .Net 2.0 certifications are much more revelant than it's predecessor. :) Christopher Ford
I don't find the certifications useful in a competency sense. I work with a group of amazing developers (for the most part), and none of them carry a single certification. Yet I believe they create some excellent applications. I'm a Senior Applications Architect, and (with all due modesty), I think I create some great stuff too - for a "hired gun." I have no certifications, and it hasn't hurt me. Contrary, we interface with developers outside of our organization, many of whom sport several sets of initials after their signature line. They're certified, and they frequently write crap - crap that fails, and crap that gets hacked! Regardless, it has become a requirement of our arrangement to have a certain number of certifications among the members of our group. Yes, we will take them. Yes, we will grumble about it. And, yes, we will learn some things - perhaps only a tidbit here and there, but we will learn something. So, are they valuable? Well, those crappy developers have jobs, and I have to assume it was their certifications and not their skills that got them where they are today. My group will be getting certifications, possibly to secure their jobs. So, yes, they're valuable, but in general, I don't believe them to be a good measure of ability. --Barry
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So, a co-worker and I got into a discussion...Do you need a certification? Personally, I find mine very valuable. What say you? My goal I think is to have the right to say, "I survived the Microsoft onslaught." Why? I have 8 Microsoft Certifications and 1 CompTIA certification. All received since 2003. and in the next 3 months I will probly go take the .Net 2.0 cert tests just to add those... Obnoxious? Possibly. =) But I do think for me, taking the tests solidifies what I learned. AND...to battle the statements "The questions aren't relevant!" I believe that they are relevant to a point. not whether it's right or wrong, but that it's a solution for which the product can be used to solve...not whether it's the best one or not either. Also, to make a quick note...I believe that the current certifications since 2003 are more relevant than in years past. Personally, I feel the most valuable certs have been the Windows Server 2003 exams and the SQL Server 2005 exams. The MCAD, MCSD certs were just some kind of twisted torcher in my opinion. =) I'm hoping the .Net 2.0 certifications are much more revelant than it's predecessor. :) Christopher Ford
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So, a co-worker and I got into a discussion...Do you need a certification? Personally, I find mine very valuable. What say you? My goal I think is to have the right to say, "I survived the Microsoft onslaught." Why? I have 8 Microsoft Certifications and 1 CompTIA certification. All received since 2003. and in the next 3 months I will probly go take the .Net 2.0 cert tests just to add those... Obnoxious? Possibly. =) But I do think for me, taking the tests solidifies what I learned. AND...to battle the statements "The questions aren't relevant!" I believe that they are relevant to a point. not whether it's right or wrong, but that it's a solution for which the product can be used to solve...not whether it's the best one or not either. Also, to make a quick note...I believe that the current certifications since 2003 are more relevant than in years past. Personally, I feel the most valuable certs have been the Windows Server 2003 exams and the SQL Server 2005 exams. The MCAD, MCSD certs were just some kind of twisted torcher in my opinion. =) I'm hoping the .Net 2.0 certifications are much more revelant than it's predecessor. :) Christopher Ford
Basically I am new to this field .. new to C# programming .. and I read everything what these really eminent people who are far more wiser than me say .. But what I sincerely feel about certifications is that certifications for me are inspirations. It's a reward given to me by someone who have a say in a professional world. (And I am not yet that much professional so I might be feeling like that). People may have whatever says about MS but still they have to agree that MS is a big organization and really owns some credit in market. Reagrdless of that not just MS but any company that offers certifications has both aspects .. that you know their technology and secondly (and perhaps of more interest to the company) you use their technology.. And about giving exam... it's a personal view.. I feel honesty still remains the best policy ... But if someone wants certifications .. well they can be obtained in any way... ENDofTEXT I feel everything in life is worth doing only once.. I am yet to find an exception. Chaitanya Joshi
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fordc03 wrote:
Do you need a certification?
Yes, in the same way a degree helps to prove what you're worth.
Tina Farrell, a 23 year old thicky from Levenshulme, Manchester.