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Graduate Jobs, is it worth applying ?????

i recently posted about a family members degree, and was looking at grad positions for her today, and to my amazement if she does end up with a 2:2 honours degree, there is next to no options for her.

i find this completely crazy... i know a 2:2 is not the best, but by completing a 4yr honours degree to me that shows commitment and other qualities which im sure organisations would require, also a good wealth of work experience along the way.

i was wondering, if you recieved a 2:2, would you chance your arm and just apply for grad positions with minimum of 2:1 requirement...... surely her experience and personality would count for something??????
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Comments

  • scubaangel
    scubaangel Posts: 6,600 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture
    I think most employers set the bar at a 2:1 because they have to set it somewhere.

    Of course personality, will count be don't forget everyone who has completed their degree at 2:1 and higher has exactly the same experiences and has arguably showed greater commitment to the degree course than a grad who has 'only' achieved a 2:2
    It’s not worth doing something unless someone, somewhere, would much rather you weren’t doing it.
    Sir Terry Pratchett
    Find my diary here

    http://forums.moneysavingexpert.com/showthread.php?t=5135113
  • fair point ,im just amazed at the options availble. i myself am graduating this year with a masters, even if i had left last year( which i considered and looked at jobs) there was a wealth of grad schemes i could of went for. it seems silly to me that some who narrowly misses a 2:1 could only go for positions like sales advisors ? the job which she does just now, i can see why shes so upset its really 4 years down the toilet to end up doing what she does anyway
  • goggle
    goggle Posts: 442 Forumite
    depends on the company really - where I work (and employ graduates!) the minimum degree is set corporately and an applicant without the minimum reqt won't get past the application form - we have so many applicants we can be choosy as to who to take to stage 2, 3 etc
    If its a direct entry-job rather than a graduate scheme there may well be more flexibility esp if she has direct experience
  • Oldernotwiser
    Oldernotwiser Posts: 37,425 Forumite
    It will also depend on her work experience and how she has spent her time whilst studying. Someone with a 2:2 who has been actively involved in voluntary work/student organisations/work experience placements will be in a better position than someone with a 2:1 who has just studied and worked in McDonalds.
  • melancholly
    melancholly Posts: 7,457 Forumite
    1,000 Posts Combo Breaker
    it will depend on the scheme - for some, they have so many applicants that anyone with less than a 2:1 will be chucked out as a first others. whether or not that's fair/sensible is beside the point as that is what will happen. if they say 2:2 or above, go for it. there are also plenty of good jobs/careers that don't come from the milkround. what sector is she looking at?
    :happyhear
  • My workplace has a 2:1 minimum for graduates (we don't have a graduate scheme per se).. still they let me in with my 2:2, MSc and 2 years experience. Then again, my MSc needed a 2:1 minimum also. Didn't take long to get round that.

    I still get rejections, now with 5 years of corporate experience, because i don't have a 2:1... ah well
  • homerhotspur
    homerhotspur Posts: 260 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 100 Posts Combo Breaker
    I was just about to post a similar question with a slightly different slant. My son has completed a 3 year physics degree at one of the better(top 10) universities. We think it is border line whether he will achieve a 2:1 or 2:2 degree. Our query is surely he should be considered for jobs even with a 2:2 from this Uni ahead of some of the lesser establishments where someone has obtained a 2:1 degree. This would seem even more unfair where the 2:1 degree was obtained in one of the softer subjects. To take this argument to extremes , surely a 2:2 graduate from Oxbridge would be preferred by employers than someone with a 2:1 from somewhere ranked 120th in the Times guide etc? But, as has been stated before, most of the good graduate type jobs specify a 2:1 requirement.
  • Lokolo
    Lokolo Posts: 20,861 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts
    I was just about to post a similar question with a slightly different slant. My son has completed a 3 year physics degree at one of the better(top 10) universities. We think it is border line whether he will achieve a 2:1 or 2:2 degree. Our query is surely he should be considered for jobs even with a 2:2 from this Uni ahead of some of the lesser establishments where someone has obtained a 2:1 degree. This would seem even more unfair where the 2:1 degree was obtained in one of the softer subjects. To take this argument to extremes , surely a 2:2 graduate from Oxbridge would be preferred by employers than someone with a 2:1 from somewhere ranked 120th in the Times guide etc? But, as has been stated before, most of the good graduate type jobs specify a 2:1 requirement.

    It hasn't mattered where I work which university you go to, just the degree specification.

    I am doing Computer Games Programming and have coped doing the same work as a grad who got a 1st in Maths at Cambridge. We had to take a competency test before we joined, which was good enough for them.

    I think it might be different if he was going into a field of Physics rather than Software Engineering.
  • goggle
    goggle Posts: 442 Forumite
    My son has completed a 3 year physics degree at one of the better(top 10) universities. We think it is border line whether he will achieve a 2:1 or 2:2 degree. Our query is surely he should be considered for jobs even with a 2:2 from this Uni ahead of some of the lesser establishments where someone has obtained a 2:1 degree. This would seem even more unfair where the 2:1 degree was obtained in one of the softer subjects. To take this argument to extremes , surely a 2:2 graduate from Oxbridge would be preferred by employers than someone with a 2:1 from somewhere ranked 120th in the Times guide etc?

    So you're saying that some universities are better than others & that people who get a degree from one of your less-preferred establishments are less capable than your son & thus should be treated as 2nd class citizens?

    Some people from the less-academic unis have a better education than an Oxbridge grad - I have interviewed many graduates in my line of work & the best by far in recent years have been from Brunel, University of Hertforshire, Northumberland, Glamorgan & similar universities. The content of their degree is no less than somebody from Oxbridge (accredited by external professional bodies) & invariably more practical!
  • homerhotspur
    homerhotspur Posts: 260 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 100 Posts Combo Breaker
    goggle wrote: »
    So you're saying that some universities are better than others & that people who get a degree from one of your less-preferred establishments are less capable than your son & thus should be treated as 2nd class citizens?

    Some people from the less-academic unis have a better education than an Oxbridge grad - I have interviewed many graduates in my line of work & the best by far in recent years have been from Brunel, University of Hertforshire, Northumberland, Glamorgan & similar universities. The content of their degree is no less than somebody from Oxbridge (accredited by external professional bodies) & invariably more practical!

    No need to get 'touchy' about it. I was not suggesting anything about people being treated as 2nd class citizens. It was purely a genuine technical query about how these things work. My son had to get straight A's at A level to get into his University whereas the, dare I say 'lesser' establishments may accept B's C's etc so it just seemed odd that if you then went on to get a 2:2 rather than a 2:1 it would render all your previous GCSE and A level results as somewhat pointless whereas someone who got a slightly better degree at a less academic Uni would be able to apply for the job.

    You say that the content of the degree is no less than somebody at Oxbridge. I wasn't aware of this and had been led to believe this was not the case. So, if this is correct, I can more understand the policy.
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