Certification on 9i .

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  • Oba

    Certification on 9i .

    I am currently hitting my head on the wall to get certified on 9i, but we
    now have 10g, so do I hold off or continue my work? Please advice thanks.


  • Hans Forbrich

    #2
    Re: Certification on 9i .

    Oba wrote:
    I am currently hitting my head on the wall to get certified on 9i, but we
    now have 10g, so do I hold off or continue my work? Please advice thanks.
    Several of the professional here will say neither cert. is necessary, or
    even a waste of time and money. (My belief: use the cert. as a guide for
    your studies and make your goal to be a superior DBA - then being certified
    is an extra.)

    You need to realize that many certification exams have errors (I'm finding
    it's not isolated to Oracle's exams). As a result there is some doubt to
    the 'worth' of certification (look through the archives for the
    discussions).

    When you study, make sure you understand the reality as well as the
    'material'. Personally test each example. Realize the 'books' and 'self
    test' guides generally have the same mistakes as the exams - you should be
    solid enough to know reality and strong enough to accept the fact the tests
    can (will) be wrong.

    If, after the above you still want to proceed ... I'm finding there are a
    lot of 9i installations around and more planned. Many companies are
    looking at 10g with interest - but waiting a while. If you plan on
    supporting a 9i environment in the next 2 years, keep plugging away. Then
    just take the upgrade exam.

    /Hans

    Comment

    • Daniel Morgan

      #3
      Re: Certification on 9i .

      Oba wrote:
      I am currently hitting my head on the wall to get certified on 9i, but we
      now have 10g, so do I hold off or continue my work? Please advice thanks.
      Hans is correct. I think the certs are a waste of time and money. It
      won't get you a job and it won't get you the skills you need to get
      a job.

      Why do I say that? Go to http://www.dice.com, http://www.hotjobs.com,
      http://www.monster.com and see how many jobs there are for "Oracle"
      then see how many jobs for "Oracle AND OCP".

      That said I am a strong believer in education so I think classes
      are worth a lot ... provided they are not taught by a certificate
      mill ... meaning a company that doesn't teach you hands-on skills
      but rather just the correct answers to a paper test.

      --
      Daniel Morgan
      We make it possible for you to keep learning at the University of Washington, even if you work full time or live outside of the Seattle area.

      We make it possible for you to keep learning at the University of Washington, even if you work full time or live outside of the Seattle area.

      damorgan@x.wash ington.edu
      (replace 'x' with a 'u' to reply)

      Comment

      • Dave

        #4
        Re: Certification on 9i .


        "Daniel Morgan" <damorgan@x.was hington.eduwrot e in message
        news:1082727979 .601882@yasure. ..
        Oba wrote:
        I am currently hitting my head on the wall to get certified on 9i, but
        we
        now have 10g, so do I hold off or continue my work? Please advice
        thanks.
        >
        Hans is correct. I think the certs are a waste of time and money. It
        won't get you a job and it won't get you the skills you need to get
        a job.
        >
        Why do I say that? Go to http://www.dice.com, http://www.hotjobs.com,
        http://www.monster.com and see how many jobs there are for "Oracle"
        then see how many jobs for "Oracle AND OCP".
        >
        That said I am a strong believer in education so I think classes
        are worth a lot ... provided they are not taught by a certificate
        mill ... meaning a company that doesn't teach you hands-on skills
        but rather just the correct answers to a paper test.
        >
        --
        Daniel Morgan
        We make it possible for you to keep learning at the University of Washington, even if you work full time or live outside of the Seattle area.

        We make it possible for you to keep learning at the University of Washington, even if you work full time or live outside of the Seattle area.

        damorgan@x.wash ington.edu
        (replace 'x' with a 'u' to reply)
        >
        It may not get you a job on its own - but it could well get you and
        interview and may well be a differntiator between two people


        Comment

        • Daniel Morgan

          #5
          Re: Certification on 9i .

          Dave wrote:
          It may not get you a job on its own - but it could well get you and
          interview and may well be a differntiator between two people
          In this part of the planet ... it won't even get you an interview.
          In fact just the opposite in some situations.

          Your mileage may vary depending on where you are on the planet.
          --
          Daniel Morgan
          We make it possible for you to keep learning at the University of Washington, even if you work full time or live outside of the Seattle area.

          We make it possible for you to keep learning at the University of Washington, even if you work full time or live outside of the Seattle area.

          damorgan@x.wash ington.edu
          (replace 'x' with a 'u' to reply)

          Comment

          • Joel Garry

            #6
            Re: Certification on 9i .

            Daniel Morgan <damorgan@x.was hington.eduwrot e in message news:<108272797 9.601882@yasure >...
            Oba wrote:
            I am currently hitting my head on the wall to get certified on 9i, but we
            now have 10g, so do I hold off or continue my work? Please advice thanks.
            >
            Hans is correct. I think the certs are a waste of time and money. It
            won't get you a job and it won't get you the skills you need to get
            a job.
            >
            Why do I say that? Go to http://www.dice.com, http://www.hotjobs.com,
            http://www.monster.com and see how many jobs there are for "Oracle"
            then see how many jobs for "Oracle AND OCP".
            Use "Certificat ion" instead of "OCP". Of course, this picks up places
            that want you to have Oracle and networking certs, but how silly is
            that?
            >
            That said I am a strong believer in education so I think classes
            are worth a lot ... provided they are not taught by a certificate
            mill ... meaning a company that doesn't teach you hands-on skills
            but rather just the correct answers to a paper test.
            Pretty much agree with you and Hans, but must point out to the OP the
            divergence between reality and the HR "professionals. " The HR people
            don't generally understand that there may be differences between
            different types of certification. So I'd say "continue your work,"
            because it documents that you are interested in continuing your career
            over time.

            jg
            --
            @home.com is bogus. "When I was a kid the Mafia ran the numbers
            racket and the government ran the jails. Today, the government runs
            the numbers racket and the jails are turned over to private industry.
            I'm not sure exactly what kind of progress that is." - Some
            journalists' fishing buddy.

            Comment

            • Don Million

              #7
              Re: Certification on 9i .

              There are some companies where certification will help you get past HR
              to the hiring manager. There are practically NO companies where
              certification would be viewed as a negative. So, bottom line is, it
              can't hurt.

              Comment

              • Michael

                #8
                Re: Certification on 9i .

                I was just hired as an Oracle DBA. Though I have been a DBA for a few
                years having an OCP was a major factor in me getting the job as I do
                not have a college degree.

                I also attended Oracle University (4 courses). This seemed to give
                the employer a sense of insurance. A new employee is always seen a
                little bit as a risk.


                Hope this helps,

                Michael

                Comment

                • Daniel Morgan

                  #9
                  Re: Certification on 9i .

                  Don Million wrote:
                  There are some companies where certification will help you get past HR
                  to the hiring manager. There are practically NO companies where
                  certification would be viewed as a negative. So, bottom line is, it
                  can't hurt.
                  Except your checkbook balance.

                  --
                  Daniel Morgan
                  We make it possible for you to keep learning at the University of Washington, even if you work full time or live outside of the Seattle area.

                  We make it possible for you to keep learning at the University of Washington, even if you work full time or live outside of the Seattle area.

                  damorgan@x.wash ington.edu
                  (replace 'x' with a 'u' to reply)

                  Comment

                  • Rich Sias

                    #10
                    Re: Certification on 9i .

                    On Fri, 23 Apr 2004 18:34:18 UTC, "Dave" <david.sharples 3@ntlXworld.com >
                    wrote:
                    >
                    "Daniel Morgan" <damorgan@x.was hington.eduwrot e in message
                    news:1082727979 .601882@yasure. ..
                    Why do I say that? Go to http://www.dice.com, http://www.hotjobs.com,
                    http://www.monster.com and see how many jobs there are for "Oracle"
                    then see how many jobs for "Oracle AND OCP".

                    That said I am a strong believer in education so I think classes
                    are worth a lot ... provided they are not taught by a certificate
                    mill ... meaning a company that doesn't teach you hands-on skills
                    but rather just the correct answers to a paper test.
                    >
                    It may not get you a job on its own - but it could well get you and
                    interview and may well be a differntiator between two people
                    >
                    >
                    I have seen several messages along these lines. I DO have 9+ years
                    experience with an obscure database. Many of these skills are useful in any
                    database setting. I'm looking to getting a "crash" education so that I can
                    drop in a "5 years" experience slot and not embarass myself to much. I did
                    a little work with Oracle 5 and none since. Alot has changed I am sure
                    since we are now up to 10g. I was just over on the oracle site and found:
                    1. self - study CDs, 2. certification exams (OCP?) and 3. Online Library of
                    400 courses.

                    What do you recommend, 1,2 and/or 3 ? I figure with 9 years and some
                    Oracle mention may get past the HR filter and to the real person to talk
                    to. They will find out undoubtedly that the Oracle is NOT the 9 years but
                    useful nevertheless. I expect the courses to take several weeks to
                    complete because of the volume of coverage. Do either courses offer
                    "hands-on" to experience errors speed differences etc. So one can learn
                    more than just syntax issues?


                    --
                    Rich Sias

                    dba seeking new employment

                    Comment

                    • Daniel Morgan

                      #11
                      Re: Certification on 9i .

                      Rich Sias wrote:
                      I have seen several messages along these lines. I DO have 9+ years
                      experience with an obscure database. Many of these skills are useful in any
                      database setting. I'm looking to getting a "crash" education so that I can
                      drop in a "5 years" experience slot and not embarass myself to much. I did
                      a little work with Oracle 5 and none since. Alot has changed I am sure
                      since we are now up to 10g. I was just over on the oracle site and found:
                      1. self - study CDs, 2. certification exams (OCP?) and 3. Online Library of
                      400 courses.
                      I still recommend you forget the whole thing. But since you obviously
                      aren't interested in such advice ... I suggest you make sure you
                      understand the following:

                      1. How the multiversion concurrency model works?
                      2. How to join tables in both ANSI and ISO syntax
                      3. How to find all of the column names belonging to a table in
                      a different schema to which you have the UPDATE privilege

                      And that you can solve the following on a whiteboard:

                      Assuming two tables with identical structure. Write a single SQL
                      statement that will determine all of the rows in the first table
                      that are not in the second and all of the rows in the second that
                      are not in the first. The result set should identify the table
                      that was the source of each row identified.

                      --
                      Daniel Morgan
                      We make it possible for you to keep learning at the University of Washington, even if you work full time or live outside of the Seattle area.

                      We make it possible for you to keep learning at the University of Washington, even if you work full time or live outside of the Seattle area.

                      damorgan@x.wash ington.edu
                      (replace 'x' with a 'u' to reply)

                      Comment

                      • GregoryD

                        #12
                        Re: Certification on 9i .


                        "Daniel Morgan" <damorgan@x.was hington.eduwrot e in message
                        news:1082768760 .767181@yasure. ..
                        Dave wrote:
                        >
                        It may not get you a job on its own - but it could well get you and
                        interview and may well be a differntiator between two people
                        >
                        In this part of the planet ... it won't even get you an interview.
                        In fact just the opposite in some situations.
                        Only if the guy doing the hiring is a complete tool.

                        Now, I put a lot of people to work, so here's the IT recruiting side of it:
                        I'll always take a guy with 5 years of experience over a guy who just
                        read about a topic and got a certificate. I have a friend who is one of
                        the worst coders on the friggin planet, yet she continues to find work
                        because she has work experience. If I have to discern between two
                        guys with similar backgrounds and skillsets and the money is the same,
                        I'll go with the certified professional. Certifications are just like your
                        references... the better they are, the better you are.

                        Frankly, though, I think that you'd be better off spending the money on
                        a Dale Carnegie session or two. There are plenty of people out there
                        with a lot of technical knowledge and the personality of a tree stump.
                        Selling yourself is one of the most important parts in getting any job,
                        and too many people have absolutely no clue how to do it.

                        GregoryD



                        Comment

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