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I'm about to finish high school. I want to become a SAP Technican right after I graduate from University (4 year degree). What major should I take? (Please name that major specifically for me, please). If you could, please tell me what University (in California) that teach this major.

Thank you all.

2006-12-13 11:26:47 · 2 answers · asked by Anonymous in Education & Reference Higher Education (University +)

2 answers

I don't know, maybe there are colleges somewhere that teach SAP, but I don't know of any.

Think about it -- if you start taking SAP / database courses in year 1, by the time you graduate at the end of year 4 that first year's class isn't worth much. That's been the problem w/ IT degrees -- the technology evolves more quickly than classes in universities can handle.

What I'd do is to get a good well-rounded college degree. If you go with IT, you will change professions at least a dozen times even if you still say you're in IT! You will be working for at least 60 years, and you can BET that your life will change every few years as the technology changes! Your college degree needs to prepare you for that change (chaos?) -- you need to be able to think clearly, communicate strongly, and be able to learn new things quickly. In other words, IT people with liberal arts degrees might start out behind a newly-minted IT-specific degree, but they soon pass up their peers.

As you get your well-rounded college degree, you will then spend your spare time finding ways to learn SAP. That means that you need to find a school situation where you have those opportunities. My alma mater might be a great college, but a 7,000 rural town doesn't have any SAP installs nearby. That's when places like UCLA, USC, SoCal, etc might be good ideas for you.

2006-12-13 11:42:54 · answer #1 · answered by geek49203 6 · 0 0

No by no means, I'm presently finding out Japanese, Italian, and French while. And it honestly makes it less difficult on the grounds that phrases are as a rule identical and even the identical For illustration in Japanese the phrase for bread is pan. In French, it is agony. Pronounced the identical approach. In Italian, to consume is mangiare. In French, it is manger. and some of these languages have a few phrases identical or the identical as English too :)

2016-09-03 15:45:55 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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