Info from someone that sits on the hiring panel: this isn't entirely true. It depends on the type of degree you're getting. If it took you 6 years to get a 4 year, yes that's a problem. Even taking 5 years to get a 4-year will lower your score somewhat. Beyond a bachelors degree, they are just happy that you did post-grad education unless it looks fishy or took excessively long.
You're kidding me? So...because I went to school 6 credits a semester for multiple years and college stretched out to 7.5 years I have a lower score
because I worked full time after my first year? You mean to say that if Delta would have been my "end game" (it's not, I'm not even sure that it appeals to me at all to be honest - especially after reading things like this) I would have been better off to finance the latter half of my education as opposed to paying out of pocket? That's hilarious. If anything, this selects against working class families who don't have the same access to higher education that upper-class families may have access to. What's particularly funny to me is that I was
flying for a living during that time period while I went to college - both in a brick and mortar institution
and when I switched to "internet school." I just can't possibly see why this is a barrier to entry HR would like to erect. I could see GPA being a target (and even that is a stretch, and I say that with a "good" GPA), or special consideration given to people with challenging degree programs, or even giving extra credit to higher education beyond your bachelors...but point reduction for not being timely enough? Good to know that HR is really focusing on things that matter during the hiring process.
What does that possibly show HR? That you can be decisive when you're 18? Hell, I didn't even know what I wanted to do with my life when I started going to college. I studied Russian (I was an exchange student in Ukraine in high school so it was a natural pick), anthropology, and math. I have upper divisions in all three as well as aviation. When I finally decided I wanted to focus on flying airplanes for a living (which in a round-about way meant going to college online) I already had 3 years of school under my belt and 3,000 hours of flight time. Even if I would have stuck with what I was doing and TRIPLE majored (which I was actually fairly close to doing) it would have taken me 5 years of full-time school to do it.
I just pulled up my transcript - I graduated with 212 credits across a wide array of subjects, I have the definition of a "well rounded" education. The truth is, I love learning, and studied everything. In fact, I'm going
back to school to study engineering starting next month. Don't tell Delta, but continuing education has become (and remains) my greatest hobby in adult-hood, and I'll probably keep going to school for my entire life. To think that I would be judged negatively for that makes me chuckle a little bit.