You would be highly incorrect. Most employers have a border of a 3.5 GPA or higher as a cutoff. Beyond that, they really care little. If you have a 4.0, you might get some extra "points" in their eyes.
And for those of you who don't believe that 3.5 is a fair cutoff, I would challenge you by saying this: I attend one of the most difficult universities in the United States, and I do not know of a single person at the university who could not achieve a 3.5 if he or she only bothered to focus. Alas, our average GPA is closer to a 2.5.
Yes, GPA is an easy filter, but for good reason. Companies want the very best. And the very best can easily achieve a 3.5 without trying and still have time to do everything this article suggests.
"I do not know of a single person at the university who could not achieve a 3.5 if he or she only bothered to focus."
This is total bullshit. First, there are many people that barely made it into college (most of whom aren't in computer science/engineering), and no matter how much they worked, could not get a 3.5. Second, by saying "if he/she only bothered to focus," you're claiming that everyone who doesn't get a 3.5 is careless, lazy, or both.
Everyone on this forum could achieve a karma rating of 3,000. And for those of you who don't believe that 3,000 is a fair cutoff, I would challenge you by saying this: I have been on HN for over a year, and I do not know of a single person on HN who could not achieve 3,000 if he or she only bothered to focus.
The reason I don't have a 3.5GPA is the same reason I don't have 3,000 karma: I enjoy both school and HN, but there is a diminishing rate of return for effort. If I do the minimum amount of effort in school to get a 2.75, then work for 40 hours a week at my company, and still hang out with my friends, I really have no regret that I never "bothered" to get a 3.5.
Grade point averages are a result of intelligence, commitment, and personal priorities. Simplifying them the way that you do is both crass and incorrect.
It depends on the school as well. The "3.5 cutoff" is the result of massive grade inflation in recent years. By comparison, my school, Harvey Mudd, has it such that 3.0 is the cutoff for the Dean's list. This seems absurdly low by comparison to most schools, yet doesn't it seem ridiculous for everyone even mildly competent to graduate with a B+ or above?
The current system encourages schools to raise grades solely to get more people to pass the 3.5 cutoffs, allowing them to say that more graduates got good jobs, creating a grade inflation feedback loop.
Perfectly valid comparison: both karma rating on HN and GPA are largely irrelevant numbers that have little bearing on how good of a programmer you are. Both numbers would, to the layman, suggest some kind of authority, but in reality do not.
Both numbers are useful for theoretically filtering for the best, but in reality... do not.
Wow, the more I think of it, the better this analogy gets!
Are you really saying that the grades you get in college courses are even remotely equivalent to a measure of how much random anonymous people agree with you on the internet? Granted, my GPA is much better than my karma, but I still don't see how thinking about math or CS problem sets all day is anything like filling the internet with your opinions/favorite links?
I've heard of instances - specifically in legal recruiting - where there's also a top limit filter. That is, some firms (top level of the second tier) won't interview graduates with a GPA over 6.0 (I'm in Australia - GPA ranks to 7.0).
I spoke with a legal recruiter about this once. The logic is that the very high GPA students are almost certainly too interested in academia, likely to go back to academia (and so leave the firm), and those that don't want academia probably worked hard for that GPA because they only want to work for a soul-crushing top tier firm.
When I pointed out exceptions to this (including my beautiful, smart and focused lawyer wife), the recruiter just shrugged. It's much easier to miss the occasional exception, than waste time on the majority where the rule applies.
Because it doesn't take time. I have a friend here at Carnegie Mellon that has a 4.0 GPA, got 3rd at ACM ICPC World Finals, and also took the 3 hardest classes this university has to offer, as well as double the average course load, all in the same semester. And he still got 9 hours of sleep a night.
By all means, I'm nowhere near as smart as he is and I personally can't do that, but if you plan your semester well, you will have time to do "more productive things" and still have a 3.5
The point isn't to "have time" the point is to have the most time possible. If you shot for a 4.0 that's going to take more time than shooting for a 2.0. In my mind it was always better to take the time saved by shooting for merely passing my classes and invest it into side projects than it was to invest that time to get a 4.0.
That didn't stop me from taking over the average course load and piling on difficult CS classes concurrently after having professors sign me out of pre-reqs, but since I shot for a 2.5 I didn't just "have time" for other things. I had lots of time for other things.
You keep asserting that it's important to invest time in high grades and you can do that while still having time for other things. I agree that one could do that, but I don't agree that investing time in a high GPA is really necessary or desirable in most circumstances.
There's a fairly wide variation in grade inflation between schools, which is why a lot of the top grad schools will adjust GPAs for students from schools with grade inflation, or lack thereof, compared to the average.
Companies would do well to do the same, or to simply work on a case by case basis. Sadly, most companies recruit from a fairly small set of schools, and have little knowledge of the grade inflation differences.
If GPAs were the worst of it, then it wouldn't be so bad, but usually the ignorance runs much deeper. I once saw a recruiter for IBM Research's Extreme Blue internship program complain to the audience that he was wasting his time talking to a room full of students, because he could be spending it talking to MIT kids instead -- he was addressing a room with 100+ CS majors from, among others, Caltech, Harvey Mudd, USC, UCLA, UCSD, Cal Poly SLO, and Pomona College.
(As for Extreme Blue, thats interesting because I did their internship last year and the people at my lab were from UCLA, Cal Poly, USC, (and obviously CMU) among others. No MIT though.)
By design, the average GPA should be close to 2.5. Most schools try to modulate the difficulty of their courses to maintain a C+ average year-to-year. In my engineering school, they had a schedule of expected class averages for each year in the program; professors that wanted to assign significantly higher or lower grades had to justify their decision to the department head. After all, if the class average is 3.5, there's no headroom for above-average students to distinguish themselves.
However, I agree that any individual who wants to put in the work can probably achieve a 3.0 or better any most schools. Most people just don't want to do that much work.
But in Singapore, maybe in other Asian countries too, getting a good grade is not that hard, but it is very time consuming. For me personally it is a choice between high GPA or personal projects, achieving both is almost impossible.
That's true. I had a near 4.0 (one A-, gah) as a senior before I said "fuck this noise" and dropped out. I also had a family, was active in a couple campus clubs, and held a full time job as a developer. I was busy, but it's not impossible.
And for those of you who don't believe that 3.5 is a fair cutoff, I would challenge you by saying this: I attend one of the most difficult universities in the United States, and I do not know of a single person at the university who could not achieve a 3.5 if he or she only bothered to focus. Alas, our average GPA is closer to a 2.5.
Yes, GPA is an easy filter, but for good reason. Companies want the very best. And the very best can easily achieve a 3.5 without trying and still have time to do everything this article suggests.