Who the hell cares where anyone went to dispatch school. Seriously.
Exactly This! Once you get some real world experience it wont matter what so ever. Hell, it shouldn't matter at all once you pass your FAA Practical exam.
This will be my last post on any dispatch school selection topic.
It is obvious that 99% of the forum belives that all dispatch licensing education is the same and you can choose your school just like you are choosing between Coke, RC or Pepsi. After all, they are all colas and after you drink them you will have similar amounts of calories.
The very nature of this thread is for newcomers who are making that very important decision on what dispatch school they should select. The advice, "Choose any damn one. They're all the same and it doesn't matter where you go," does them no good. The very fact they are coming to this thread is to try to separate out what makes them different. If there were no differences then there would be no reason to have this thread, and the discussion would not have gone on for as long as it has.
To the newcomer who may have read this whole thing. I really don't care where if you went to Sheffield, Jeppesen, IFOD, or Bob's Dispatch School and Tire Center. Good for you for obtaining your license.
However there are a few people that do care, and they are not random screen names on a web forum that are just touting their school or blasting another one. They are the hiring managers that are looking at your resume and deciding if you, Mr. or Ms. No Experience is worth the time of day for an interview, or if you should be round filed.
Each hiring manager has their own opinions on each school and where you went matters to them. They have been doing this long enough to know what kind of dispatchers come out of each school and in an absence of anything else substantial on your resume, that is going to be the impression of you they receive. If you went to a school they have had bad experiences with, likely no interview for you.
So, while your future peers here on Jetcareers are telling you that it doesn't matter. It really doesn't matter to them, myself included. However since I want to help you out I will leave you with my final piece of advice on this topic.
Decide on where you want to go to dispatch school not on convenience, price, and some popular notion on a web forum that it doesn't matter. Decide on where you want to go to dispatch school based on what is likely to get you a job in the field in the least amount of time. Talk to hiring managers, talk face to face with real dispatchers and get their opinions. If you gain a sense that an airline you really want to work at prefers grads of a certain school then factor that in. At the end of the day, decide on which school you think will give you the best chance of success not just for getting the piece of paper, they all do that, but also for landing that first job and having a successful career.