Thursday, October 25, 2007

What do you think?

Do you need a diploma to get work?

I mean what are the + to have a diploma?
Do you need it if you wanna work in a foreign country?
Do people look at diploma's?

thanks

And a study offcourse




19 comments:

Ryan G. said...

Hey Mitch..Thanks again for the help. Nice study by the way.

A diploma now a days is almost a necessity. Im not saying that its impossible to get a job without one but some employers dont even consider you without a degree. I dont know what its like in other countries but it really helps in the U.S.

When you fill out an application for a job, you will put the college you attended and if you recieved a degree or not. They dont necessarily look at a physical copy of the diploma, but they could call the school to verify that you did in fact receive the diploma.

Anonymous said...

I worked in advertising for many years in NYC before delving into illustration full-time. Nobody in that field, and I mean NOBODY ever cared that I dropped out of art school. In fact I've never even had to show a resume for a job. It was all about the portfolio. The one job I didn't land because of no diploma was a teaching gig. That also totally depends on the institution. At School of Visual Arts I had several great teachers who've only worked in their field their whole life with no formal training or higher education.

Overall I'd say college is a waste of time and money if you're willing to bust your ass and train yourself. Getting good jobs is more about networking than anything else in my experience. People expect you to have the skills, talent and portfolio. If you meet the right person at the right time, you're in.

Personally, I can't imagine working full time for a big company ever again. Those environments are about mediocrity, not excellence or originality. I suppose if you're fine with doing crap most of your life and care more about a steady paycheck you could go to art school and then work for the man.

Mitch Leeuwe said...

@ Ryan: No problemo man, I hope I will see a kick ass ink soon ;)

Strange that they only look at the ones with diplomas... I am curious wich company's does that. But I don't think I wanna work for them.

@ Brian:
"The one job I didn't land because of no diploma was a teaching gig"
that's sucks....

"Overall I'd say college is a waste of time and money if you're willing to bust your ass and train yourself."
Yeah, that's the thing I'm thinking myself as well. At the moment I don't have the time to draw as many as I would like to do and that's all because of school won't let me do the things I wanna do.
But my current school (multi media, building websites and stuff) is a piece of cake (it takes only alot of time) and with a bit luck I will get that diploma in 6 or 8 months. So I think that would be too stupid to dump, when I am this close and can do some things besides school.

But I think I made my mind clear, no art school for sure.

Thanks for the anwser both, I really appriciate it.

Anonymous said...

Yeah, dropping out with only a few months to go is probably not a good idea.

I was offered a job at small design shop with a good salary the summer between my junior and senior year. I saw no reason to finish school when I had a great opportunity to start working in the field. I learned more my first year out in the workforce than three years of college.

Ryan G. said...

Ive talked to a few folks that graduated from my school that are working in the industry. Some are in charge of hiring. One guy said that they recieve tons of resumes and they have to go through them all, so in order to speed up the process they just keep the ones with expierience or college degree and the rest just gets thrown away.

The most important thing is networking to find a job. I think the majority of jobs are filled through networking rather than employers advertising an available job.

Since youre so young, A good source of Networking would be at the school youre attending. The teachers there Im assuming have worked in the industry and theres probably a career services office that has connections. Also, one of your peers might get a job in the industry, opening an opportunity for you.

I guess it all comes down to what job your applying to. No you dont necessarily need a degree in some fields, but it might be good for backup.

Im working in the industrial design field right now working with 3d software. Im also in school and have the opportunity to go full time when I want. I just want to finish up school though, in case something would happen, like i dont like it, downsizing, fired, etc..
Maybe its a waste of time and money and the fact is, expirience and a good portfolio will trunmp a degree any day in a creative industry. The hard part is getting your foot in somewhere. Thats where a degree might help you.

Mitch Leeuwe said...

Good points, thanks for sharing.

I really doubt allot :p

I'm going to think about it and deside furter on what I will do. To think about it, I don't have to make a decision so soon. You never know what will happen.

Ricardo Cantoral said...

Mitch we are in an identical situation.I feel like I am not learning anything in College. I don't give a crap about it anymore.

Mitch Leeuwe said...

"I feel like I am not learning anything in College. I don't give a crap about it anymore."

Life is hard... You really wanna do something and you'r beeing pushed back by something that supposed to help you.

Ricardo Cantoral said...

"Life is hard... You really wanna do something and you'r beeing pushed back by something that supposed to help you."

My sentiments exactly. I mean they have some art courses in my school but not a single course teaches about construction or animation. The only reason I am were I am today is because my own determination and John K.'s blog.

Amir Avni said...

Great work you've been posting Mitch!

joost said...

Hi Mitch,
a degree or diploma is not neccesary in the industry.
good work and experience is!

on the other hand, experience can be build up during a study, with interships (:read unpaid employment).

also you probably build up a network while studing, with teachers and friends and on your interships , which is important for future careers.

I found myself very happy when I started artschool , I had a good group of friends among me who where intersted in the same things, was able to make animations and experiment for 4 years.
did some great internships.
completed a good looking film etc

and also got a good job out of the internship , working an a cool tv series.
Now, started my own studio with an old classmate from artschool.

so what I can say, is that not the diploma, but the experience that I've from getting that diploma matters.

hope this helped you out a little
best
joost

Mitch Leeuwe said...

Thanks all, this is really helping me.

I will think it all over :)

Jelle Gijsberts said...

Hoi Mitch,

Mijn engels is niet zo heel goed, tenminste niet zo goed dat ik er hele verhalen in kan houden, dus ik doe het even in het Nederlands.

Ik kom net van school af (diploma gehaald) en heb daarvoor met precies dezelfde vragen gezeten waar jij nu mee zit.
Is het eigenlijk wel nodig? en ook of je in de praktijk niet veel meer kan leren?

Volgens mij is een diploma niet perse nodig, ik heb het nog niet meegemaakt dat een opdrachtgever (ik werk nu als freelancer) hier om vroeg. Daarnaast heb ik stage gelopen en gewerkt bij een aantal bedrijven en veel van de beste mensen daar waren allemaal autodidact.
Het gaat er gewoon om of het werk dat je maakt tof en mooi is en of jij iemand bent waar ze op kunnen bouwen (deadlines halen, afspraken nakomen etc)

Maar dat wil denk ik niet zeggen dat een diploma helemaal overbodig is. Het gaat niet zozeer om het diploma op zich (dat is gewoon een papiertje en zoals gezegd, niemand vraagt erom) maar meer om de tijd en de ruimte die je krijgt om je zelf te ontwikkelen. Daarnaast krijg je een hoop aantal kansen en mogelijkheden, stages en projecten waar je anders nooit aan kan deelnemen.
Veel mensen die roepen dat ze er niks hebben geleerd, hebben dit vaak aan zichzelf te danken. Doordat ze gewoon simpelweg niks hebben uitgevoerd en op hun talent, vaak met de hakken over de sloot de opleiding hebben afgerond of vroegtijdig zijn gestopt.
Het gaat er gewoon om of je wat met de kansen die je daar krijgt doet.

En al deze dingen kan je ook voor jezelf creeren, alleen vergt dat super veel moeite en discipline. Meer denk ik dan gewoon naar school gaan.

Succes man, ik vind het werk en de studies die je nu doet in ieder geval al heel gaaf!
Groet,

Jelle

Mustafa Kandaz said...

Hey Mitch,

goed bezig man, i'm diggin those studies, wat betreft het papiertje wat men diploma noemt ben ik het wel eens met Jelle, het gaat meer om de tijd die ze je geven om jezelf te ontwikkelen,

zie je bij het bowlen dude,

selams,

mustafa

Mitch Leeuwe said...

Bedankt gasten, goeie punten.

Ik zie jullie bij het bowlen!

Rich Dannys said...

You don't need a Diploma.. I dropped out of 2nd Year Sheridan & never looked back. Have been working steadily in the Animation field, ever since.

Employers are only concerned about whether you can draw/animate.. The rest, is just window dressing.

Yes, a Diploma will show an Employer that you have the dedication towards completing something. But in the end, you get Jobs based on your ability. And oftentimes, the ability you showed, in your most recent Job assignments..

It's a small industry, where reputations spread quickly. A solid Portfolio & an envious body of Work, will prove to be much more valuable to you, than some College's stamp of approval.. Which is usually more about protecting their own identity/reputation, than those of the Student Body..

My 2 Cents..
Groetjes, uit Canada!

Taber said...

Degrees impress the suits, and the suits have the money. I don't think it's strictly necessary to land the job, but if you want to negotiate higher salery, or get a management job such as director some day, a degree would certainly help.

My dad used to tell me that a degree isn't to prove that your work is good, it's to prove that you can stick out an annoying situation and reliably jump through hoops to get what you want.

Mitch Leeuwe said...

Thanks, this post really have some interesting comments. I hope this can help allot of people!

"Degrees impress the suits"

Yeah I agree. But isn't this the thing where "creative" people needs to fight against?
That's a sort of jumping trough hoops as well, right?

Mitchel Kennedy said...

A degree will help with immigration into most countries. Governments like letting in people who have pieces of paper.

A degree does not guarantee that you'll have the skills needed to be a powerful artist. There's not a school on the face of this earth that can teach you how to be the most powerful artist you can be. If the school is teaching you, then your level only reaches that of the school -- but with yourself, you can push yourself to be better and better. Keep doing this stuff! Keep working hard!

A degree DOES guarantee that you'll leave school with debt, though. haha

See ya around Other Mitch!