For how long after graduating college should GPA be listed on one's resume?

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I graduated college with a degree in computer science and a GPA of ~3.1, and I'm currently employed full time as a software engineer.



My GPA isn't impressive, but it's not bad either. When I was looking for my first job, I was told by recruiters that a soon-to-be or recent grad should always list their GPA, or risk recruiters assuming a worse GPA than you actually have.



That makes perfect sense to me, but what about someone who has professional experience? Of course the degree should remain on the resume, but at what point is college GPA no longer relevant?







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  • I'll just comment that I did contract work after I graduated and in the IT field was never asked for my GPA. They only cared that I had a degree. If they want my GPA they can request my transcripts. I think have the time it is just an HR thing to ask for it, managers only care that you stuck it out and finished your time in college. The time I had to provide it on an application was with few government jobs, but they also had my transcripts.
    – Shawn Melton
    Jul 31 '15 at 23:59

















up vote
8
down vote

favorite
1












I graduated college with a degree in computer science and a GPA of ~3.1, and I'm currently employed full time as a software engineer.



My GPA isn't impressive, but it's not bad either. When I was looking for my first job, I was told by recruiters that a soon-to-be or recent grad should always list their GPA, or risk recruiters assuming a worse GPA than you actually have.



That makes perfect sense to me, but what about someone who has professional experience? Of course the degree should remain on the resume, but at what point is college GPA no longer relevant?







share|improve this question






















  • I'll just comment that I did contract work after I graduated and in the IT field was never asked for my GPA. They only cared that I had a degree. If they want my GPA they can request my transcripts. I think have the time it is just an HR thing to ask for it, managers only care that you stuck it out and finished your time in college. The time I had to provide it on an application was with few government jobs, but they also had my transcripts.
    – Shawn Melton
    Jul 31 '15 at 23:59













up vote
8
down vote

favorite
1









up vote
8
down vote

favorite
1






1





I graduated college with a degree in computer science and a GPA of ~3.1, and I'm currently employed full time as a software engineer.



My GPA isn't impressive, but it's not bad either. When I was looking for my first job, I was told by recruiters that a soon-to-be or recent grad should always list their GPA, or risk recruiters assuming a worse GPA than you actually have.



That makes perfect sense to me, but what about someone who has professional experience? Of course the degree should remain on the resume, but at what point is college GPA no longer relevant?







share|improve this question














I graduated college with a degree in computer science and a GPA of ~3.1, and I'm currently employed full time as a software engineer.



My GPA isn't impressive, but it's not bad either. When I was looking for my first job, I was told by recruiters that a soon-to-be or recent grad should always list their GPA, or risk recruiters assuming a worse GPA than you actually have.



That makes perfect sense to me, but what about someone who has professional experience? Of course the degree should remain on the resume, but at what point is college GPA no longer relevant?









share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jul 31 '15 at 17:23

























asked Jul 31 '15 at 16:56









Not My Real Profile

277211




277211











  • I'll just comment that I did contract work after I graduated and in the IT field was never asked for my GPA. They only cared that I had a degree. If they want my GPA they can request my transcripts. I think have the time it is just an HR thing to ask for it, managers only care that you stuck it out and finished your time in college. The time I had to provide it on an application was with few government jobs, but they also had my transcripts.
    – Shawn Melton
    Jul 31 '15 at 23:59

















  • I'll just comment that I did contract work after I graduated and in the IT field was never asked for my GPA. They only cared that I had a degree. If they want my GPA they can request my transcripts. I think have the time it is just an HR thing to ask for it, managers only care that you stuck it out and finished your time in college. The time I had to provide it on an application was with few government jobs, but they also had my transcripts.
    – Shawn Melton
    Jul 31 '15 at 23:59
















I'll just comment that I did contract work after I graduated and in the IT field was never asked for my GPA. They only cared that I had a degree. If they want my GPA they can request my transcripts. I think have the time it is just an HR thing to ask for it, managers only care that you stuck it out and finished your time in college. The time I had to provide it on an application was with few government jobs, but they also had my transcripts.
– Shawn Melton
Jul 31 '15 at 23:59





I'll just comment that I did contract work after I graduated and in the IT field was never asked for my GPA. They only cared that I had a degree. If they want my GPA they can request my transcripts. I think have the time it is just an HR thing to ask for it, managers only care that you stuck it out and finished your time in college. The time I had to provide it on an application was with few government jobs, but they also had my transcripts.
– Shawn Melton
Jul 31 '15 at 23:59











4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
8
down vote



accepted










This varies from industry to industry. If you were a lawyer, it's quite possible that the school and GPA will still be relevant 5, 10, 20 years on. In your industry, the majority of employers (but yes you will get exceptions), won't care beyond your first job, it is in effect counting as your experience for the role.



If you change jobs frequently in your first couple of years (either by choice or by force), then you may need it, but likely there's a bigger issue changing so frequently so soon anyway.



After a few years of experience, your degree isn't going to mean too much anyway (unless you studied at somewhere like MIT), experience will conquer all (again, yes a few employers WILL still care so YMMV, but in general).



As a hiring manager I don't even tend to look at the details of a degree in an experienced hire, I just do my own due-diligence to ensure they have the required skills.






share|improve this answer




















  • An applicant who has 10 years of experience between them and their GPA should honestly know better than to treat it as anything more than, at most, a personal achievement if it is very high (near perfect/honors status). I don't see any reason this would be different for lawyers, who have plenty of ways to demonstrate their value on a resume.
    – Air
    Jul 31 '15 at 20:27










  • Well I did say "possible", but in top legal firms this can be an issue (not just in Suits). In the UK a GPA is just starting to become a thing, mostly it's about the class of your degree. I used to work for someone who had a first from Oxford, and even though it was about 25 years since he'd graduated he still managed to work it into any conversation (really, talk about cheese and he'd get onto Oxford), he'd be impressed by a GPA after years of experience.
    – The Wandering Dev Manager
    Jul 31 '15 at 20:45






  • 4




    Sounds like the old joke, "How do you know someone went to Harvard? Because they'll tell you."
    – Air
    Jul 31 '15 at 20:50

















up vote
2
down vote













This really depends on how good the GPA was.



At a 3.1, you are probably better off removing it once you get your first job. The higher the GPA though, the better it is to keep on your CV. A good GPA - and by good i mean a GPA that is typically listed as a minimum requirement for jobs, not being american i am unsure, but around a 3.5+? - could be kept on your CV indefinitely.



This isn't to say that a lower GPA should be ashamed or anything, just that a higher GPA can be a better advert for your candidacy.



Keep the GPA by the school you went to, so that it blends in with the overall CV.



As a final note, the recruiters are right - until you get your first job (and your first year working at thst job!) you need to show your GPA.






share|improve this answer




















  • I sometimes see minimum GPA requirements advertised with jobs, but it's usually for more old-fashioned tech companies, like Oracle, Cisco, and AT&T. Also, I once applied for a job that didn't have a GPA requirement advertised and the poorly-configured Taleo site spit out some error message related to a variable called GPA_3_0_KNOCKOUT.
    – Not My Real Profile
    Aug 2 '15 at 19:57

















up vote
0
down vote













Your mileage may vary but after one job of multiple years post college, the GPA is just a bit superfluous.






share|improve this answer



























    up vote
    0
    down vote













    Is the job you're at currently a student intern position? If so I think GPA is fairly relevant in those kind of jobs.



    In any event, I think a lot of places are catching on that knowledge is better than pure GPA. My first job out of college this person I worked with graduated the same time. He had a GPA of 2.something but yet he turned out to be the best person at the company implementing many key projects and had vast knowledge. I'm honestly sad I can't ask him questions anymore.



    So no, GPA probably won't be looked at but then again probably wouldn't hurt to put it in. I don't think they'll even ask about your GPA much less even care what it is.






    share|improve this answer




















    • No, as I said in the question I've graduated. I edited to clarify that it's a full time job.
      – Not My Real Profile
      Jul 31 '15 at 20:27










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    4 Answers
    4






    active

    oldest

    votes








    4 Answers
    4






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes








    up vote
    8
    down vote



    accepted










    This varies from industry to industry. If you were a lawyer, it's quite possible that the school and GPA will still be relevant 5, 10, 20 years on. In your industry, the majority of employers (but yes you will get exceptions), won't care beyond your first job, it is in effect counting as your experience for the role.



    If you change jobs frequently in your first couple of years (either by choice or by force), then you may need it, but likely there's a bigger issue changing so frequently so soon anyway.



    After a few years of experience, your degree isn't going to mean too much anyway (unless you studied at somewhere like MIT), experience will conquer all (again, yes a few employers WILL still care so YMMV, but in general).



    As a hiring manager I don't even tend to look at the details of a degree in an experienced hire, I just do my own due-diligence to ensure they have the required skills.






    share|improve this answer




















    • An applicant who has 10 years of experience between them and their GPA should honestly know better than to treat it as anything more than, at most, a personal achievement if it is very high (near perfect/honors status). I don't see any reason this would be different for lawyers, who have plenty of ways to demonstrate their value on a resume.
      – Air
      Jul 31 '15 at 20:27










    • Well I did say "possible", but in top legal firms this can be an issue (not just in Suits). In the UK a GPA is just starting to become a thing, mostly it's about the class of your degree. I used to work for someone who had a first from Oxford, and even though it was about 25 years since he'd graduated he still managed to work it into any conversation (really, talk about cheese and he'd get onto Oxford), he'd be impressed by a GPA after years of experience.
      – The Wandering Dev Manager
      Jul 31 '15 at 20:45






    • 4




      Sounds like the old joke, "How do you know someone went to Harvard? Because they'll tell you."
      – Air
      Jul 31 '15 at 20:50














    up vote
    8
    down vote



    accepted










    This varies from industry to industry. If you were a lawyer, it's quite possible that the school and GPA will still be relevant 5, 10, 20 years on. In your industry, the majority of employers (but yes you will get exceptions), won't care beyond your first job, it is in effect counting as your experience for the role.



    If you change jobs frequently in your first couple of years (either by choice or by force), then you may need it, but likely there's a bigger issue changing so frequently so soon anyway.



    After a few years of experience, your degree isn't going to mean too much anyway (unless you studied at somewhere like MIT), experience will conquer all (again, yes a few employers WILL still care so YMMV, but in general).



    As a hiring manager I don't even tend to look at the details of a degree in an experienced hire, I just do my own due-diligence to ensure they have the required skills.






    share|improve this answer




















    • An applicant who has 10 years of experience between them and their GPA should honestly know better than to treat it as anything more than, at most, a personal achievement if it is very high (near perfect/honors status). I don't see any reason this would be different for lawyers, who have plenty of ways to demonstrate their value on a resume.
      – Air
      Jul 31 '15 at 20:27










    • Well I did say "possible", but in top legal firms this can be an issue (not just in Suits). In the UK a GPA is just starting to become a thing, mostly it's about the class of your degree. I used to work for someone who had a first from Oxford, and even though it was about 25 years since he'd graduated he still managed to work it into any conversation (really, talk about cheese and he'd get onto Oxford), he'd be impressed by a GPA after years of experience.
      – The Wandering Dev Manager
      Jul 31 '15 at 20:45






    • 4




      Sounds like the old joke, "How do you know someone went to Harvard? Because they'll tell you."
      – Air
      Jul 31 '15 at 20:50












    up vote
    8
    down vote



    accepted







    up vote
    8
    down vote



    accepted






    This varies from industry to industry. If you were a lawyer, it's quite possible that the school and GPA will still be relevant 5, 10, 20 years on. In your industry, the majority of employers (but yes you will get exceptions), won't care beyond your first job, it is in effect counting as your experience for the role.



    If you change jobs frequently in your first couple of years (either by choice or by force), then you may need it, but likely there's a bigger issue changing so frequently so soon anyway.



    After a few years of experience, your degree isn't going to mean too much anyway (unless you studied at somewhere like MIT), experience will conquer all (again, yes a few employers WILL still care so YMMV, but in general).



    As a hiring manager I don't even tend to look at the details of a degree in an experienced hire, I just do my own due-diligence to ensure they have the required skills.






    share|improve this answer












    This varies from industry to industry. If you were a lawyer, it's quite possible that the school and GPA will still be relevant 5, 10, 20 years on. In your industry, the majority of employers (but yes you will get exceptions), won't care beyond your first job, it is in effect counting as your experience for the role.



    If you change jobs frequently in your first couple of years (either by choice or by force), then you may need it, but likely there's a bigger issue changing so frequently so soon anyway.



    After a few years of experience, your degree isn't going to mean too much anyway (unless you studied at somewhere like MIT), experience will conquer all (again, yes a few employers WILL still care so YMMV, but in general).



    As a hiring manager I don't even tend to look at the details of a degree in an experienced hire, I just do my own due-diligence to ensure they have the required skills.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Jul 31 '15 at 17:21









    The Wandering Dev Manager

    29.8k956107




    29.8k956107











    • An applicant who has 10 years of experience between them and their GPA should honestly know better than to treat it as anything more than, at most, a personal achievement if it is very high (near perfect/honors status). I don't see any reason this would be different for lawyers, who have plenty of ways to demonstrate their value on a resume.
      – Air
      Jul 31 '15 at 20:27










    • Well I did say "possible", but in top legal firms this can be an issue (not just in Suits). In the UK a GPA is just starting to become a thing, mostly it's about the class of your degree. I used to work for someone who had a first from Oxford, and even though it was about 25 years since he'd graduated he still managed to work it into any conversation (really, talk about cheese and he'd get onto Oxford), he'd be impressed by a GPA after years of experience.
      – The Wandering Dev Manager
      Jul 31 '15 at 20:45






    • 4




      Sounds like the old joke, "How do you know someone went to Harvard? Because they'll tell you."
      – Air
      Jul 31 '15 at 20:50
















    • An applicant who has 10 years of experience between them and their GPA should honestly know better than to treat it as anything more than, at most, a personal achievement if it is very high (near perfect/honors status). I don't see any reason this would be different for lawyers, who have plenty of ways to demonstrate their value on a resume.
      – Air
      Jul 31 '15 at 20:27










    • Well I did say "possible", but in top legal firms this can be an issue (not just in Suits). In the UK a GPA is just starting to become a thing, mostly it's about the class of your degree. I used to work for someone who had a first from Oxford, and even though it was about 25 years since he'd graduated he still managed to work it into any conversation (really, talk about cheese and he'd get onto Oxford), he'd be impressed by a GPA after years of experience.
      – The Wandering Dev Manager
      Jul 31 '15 at 20:45






    • 4




      Sounds like the old joke, "How do you know someone went to Harvard? Because they'll tell you."
      – Air
      Jul 31 '15 at 20:50















    An applicant who has 10 years of experience between them and their GPA should honestly know better than to treat it as anything more than, at most, a personal achievement if it is very high (near perfect/honors status). I don't see any reason this would be different for lawyers, who have plenty of ways to demonstrate their value on a resume.
    – Air
    Jul 31 '15 at 20:27




    An applicant who has 10 years of experience between them and their GPA should honestly know better than to treat it as anything more than, at most, a personal achievement if it is very high (near perfect/honors status). I don't see any reason this would be different for lawyers, who have plenty of ways to demonstrate their value on a resume.
    – Air
    Jul 31 '15 at 20:27












    Well I did say "possible", but in top legal firms this can be an issue (not just in Suits). In the UK a GPA is just starting to become a thing, mostly it's about the class of your degree. I used to work for someone who had a first from Oxford, and even though it was about 25 years since he'd graduated he still managed to work it into any conversation (really, talk about cheese and he'd get onto Oxford), he'd be impressed by a GPA after years of experience.
    – The Wandering Dev Manager
    Jul 31 '15 at 20:45




    Well I did say "possible", but in top legal firms this can be an issue (not just in Suits). In the UK a GPA is just starting to become a thing, mostly it's about the class of your degree. I used to work for someone who had a first from Oxford, and even though it was about 25 years since he'd graduated he still managed to work it into any conversation (really, talk about cheese and he'd get onto Oxford), he'd be impressed by a GPA after years of experience.
    – The Wandering Dev Manager
    Jul 31 '15 at 20:45




    4




    4




    Sounds like the old joke, "How do you know someone went to Harvard? Because they'll tell you."
    – Air
    Jul 31 '15 at 20:50




    Sounds like the old joke, "How do you know someone went to Harvard? Because they'll tell you."
    – Air
    Jul 31 '15 at 20:50












    up vote
    2
    down vote













    This really depends on how good the GPA was.



    At a 3.1, you are probably better off removing it once you get your first job. The higher the GPA though, the better it is to keep on your CV. A good GPA - and by good i mean a GPA that is typically listed as a minimum requirement for jobs, not being american i am unsure, but around a 3.5+? - could be kept on your CV indefinitely.



    This isn't to say that a lower GPA should be ashamed or anything, just that a higher GPA can be a better advert for your candidacy.



    Keep the GPA by the school you went to, so that it blends in with the overall CV.



    As a final note, the recruiters are right - until you get your first job (and your first year working at thst job!) you need to show your GPA.






    share|improve this answer




















    • I sometimes see minimum GPA requirements advertised with jobs, but it's usually for more old-fashioned tech companies, like Oracle, Cisco, and AT&T. Also, I once applied for a job that didn't have a GPA requirement advertised and the poorly-configured Taleo site spit out some error message related to a variable called GPA_3_0_KNOCKOUT.
      – Not My Real Profile
      Aug 2 '15 at 19:57














    up vote
    2
    down vote













    This really depends on how good the GPA was.



    At a 3.1, you are probably better off removing it once you get your first job. The higher the GPA though, the better it is to keep on your CV. A good GPA - and by good i mean a GPA that is typically listed as a minimum requirement for jobs, not being american i am unsure, but around a 3.5+? - could be kept on your CV indefinitely.



    This isn't to say that a lower GPA should be ashamed or anything, just that a higher GPA can be a better advert for your candidacy.



    Keep the GPA by the school you went to, so that it blends in with the overall CV.



    As a final note, the recruiters are right - until you get your first job (and your first year working at thst job!) you need to show your GPA.






    share|improve this answer




















    • I sometimes see minimum GPA requirements advertised with jobs, but it's usually for more old-fashioned tech companies, like Oracle, Cisco, and AT&T. Also, I once applied for a job that didn't have a GPA requirement advertised and the poorly-configured Taleo site spit out some error message related to a variable called GPA_3_0_KNOCKOUT.
      – Not My Real Profile
      Aug 2 '15 at 19:57












    up vote
    2
    down vote










    up vote
    2
    down vote









    This really depends on how good the GPA was.



    At a 3.1, you are probably better off removing it once you get your first job. The higher the GPA though, the better it is to keep on your CV. A good GPA - and by good i mean a GPA that is typically listed as a minimum requirement for jobs, not being american i am unsure, but around a 3.5+? - could be kept on your CV indefinitely.



    This isn't to say that a lower GPA should be ashamed or anything, just that a higher GPA can be a better advert for your candidacy.



    Keep the GPA by the school you went to, so that it blends in with the overall CV.



    As a final note, the recruiters are right - until you get your first job (and your first year working at thst job!) you need to show your GPA.






    share|improve this answer












    This really depends on how good the GPA was.



    At a 3.1, you are probably better off removing it once you get your first job. The higher the GPA though, the better it is to keep on your CV. A good GPA - and by good i mean a GPA that is typically listed as a minimum requirement for jobs, not being american i am unsure, but around a 3.5+? - could be kept on your CV indefinitely.



    This isn't to say that a lower GPA should be ashamed or anything, just that a higher GPA can be a better advert for your candidacy.



    Keep the GPA by the school you went to, so that it blends in with the overall CV.



    As a final note, the recruiters are right - until you get your first job (and your first year working at thst job!) you need to show your GPA.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Aug 1 '15 at 10:43









    bharal

    11.4k22453




    11.4k22453











    • I sometimes see minimum GPA requirements advertised with jobs, but it's usually for more old-fashioned tech companies, like Oracle, Cisco, and AT&T. Also, I once applied for a job that didn't have a GPA requirement advertised and the poorly-configured Taleo site spit out some error message related to a variable called GPA_3_0_KNOCKOUT.
      – Not My Real Profile
      Aug 2 '15 at 19:57
















    • I sometimes see minimum GPA requirements advertised with jobs, but it's usually for more old-fashioned tech companies, like Oracle, Cisco, and AT&T. Also, I once applied for a job that didn't have a GPA requirement advertised and the poorly-configured Taleo site spit out some error message related to a variable called GPA_3_0_KNOCKOUT.
      – Not My Real Profile
      Aug 2 '15 at 19:57















    I sometimes see minimum GPA requirements advertised with jobs, but it's usually for more old-fashioned tech companies, like Oracle, Cisco, and AT&T. Also, I once applied for a job that didn't have a GPA requirement advertised and the poorly-configured Taleo site spit out some error message related to a variable called GPA_3_0_KNOCKOUT.
    – Not My Real Profile
    Aug 2 '15 at 19:57




    I sometimes see minimum GPA requirements advertised with jobs, but it's usually for more old-fashioned tech companies, like Oracle, Cisco, and AT&T. Also, I once applied for a job that didn't have a GPA requirement advertised and the poorly-configured Taleo site spit out some error message related to a variable called GPA_3_0_KNOCKOUT.
    – Not My Real Profile
    Aug 2 '15 at 19:57










    up vote
    0
    down vote













    Your mileage may vary but after one job of multiple years post college, the GPA is just a bit superfluous.






    share|improve this answer
























      up vote
      0
      down vote













      Your mileage may vary but after one job of multiple years post college, the GPA is just a bit superfluous.






      share|improve this answer






















        up vote
        0
        down vote










        up vote
        0
        down vote









        Your mileage may vary but after one job of multiple years post college, the GPA is just a bit superfluous.






        share|improve this answer












        Your mileage may vary but after one job of multiple years post college, the GPA is just a bit superfluous.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Jul 31 '15 at 17:11









        PSU_Kardi

        947410




        947410




















            up vote
            0
            down vote













            Is the job you're at currently a student intern position? If so I think GPA is fairly relevant in those kind of jobs.



            In any event, I think a lot of places are catching on that knowledge is better than pure GPA. My first job out of college this person I worked with graduated the same time. He had a GPA of 2.something but yet he turned out to be the best person at the company implementing many key projects and had vast knowledge. I'm honestly sad I can't ask him questions anymore.



            So no, GPA probably won't be looked at but then again probably wouldn't hurt to put it in. I don't think they'll even ask about your GPA much less even care what it is.






            share|improve this answer




















            • No, as I said in the question I've graduated. I edited to clarify that it's a full time job.
              – Not My Real Profile
              Jul 31 '15 at 20:27














            up vote
            0
            down vote













            Is the job you're at currently a student intern position? If so I think GPA is fairly relevant in those kind of jobs.



            In any event, I think a lot of places are catching on that knowledge is better than pure GPA. My first job out of college this person I worked with graduated the same time. He had a GPA of 2.something but yet he turned out to be the best person at the company implementing many key projects and had vast knowledge. I'm honestly sad I can't ask him questions anymore.



            So no, GPA probably won't be looked at but then again probably wouldn't hurt to put it in. I don't think they'll even ask about your GPA much less even care what it is.






            share|improve this answer




















            • No, as I said in the question I've graduated. I edited to clarify that it's a full time job.
              – Not My Real Profile
              Jul 31 '15 at 20:27












            up vote
            0
            down vote










            up vote
            0
            down vote









            Is the job you're at currently a student intern position? If so I think GPA is fairly relevant in those kind of jobs.



            In any event, I think a lot of places are catching on that knowledge is better than pure GPA. My first job out of college this person I worked with graduated the same time. He had a GPA of 2.something but yet he turned out to be the best person at the company implementing many key projects and had vast knowledge. I'm honestly sad I can't ask him questions anymore.



            So no, GPA probably won't be looked at but then again probably wouldn't hurt to put it in. I don't think they'll even ask about your GPA much less even care what it is.






            share|improve this answer












            Is the job you're at currently a student intern position? If so I think GPA is fairly relevant in those kind of jobs.



            In any event, I think a lot of places are catching on that knowledge is better than pure GPA. My first job out of college this person I worked with graduated the same time. He had a GPA of 2.something but yet he turned out to be the best person at the company implementing many key projects and had vast knowledge. I'm honestly sad I can't ask him questions anymore.



            So no, GPA probably won't be looked at but then again probably wouldn't hurt to put it in. I don't think they'll even ask about your GPA much less even care what it is.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Jul 31 '15 at 17:21









            Dan

            91854




            91854











            • No, as I said in the question I've graduated. I edited to clarify that it's a full time job.
              – Not My Real Profile
              Jul 31 '15 at 20:27
















            • No, as I said in the question I've graduated. I edited to clarify that it's a full time job.
              – Not My Real Profile
              Jul 31 '15 at 20:27















            No, as I said in the question I've graduated. I edited to clarify that it's a full time job.
            – Not My Real Profile
            Jul 31 '15 at 20:27




            No, as I said in the question I've graduated. I edited to clarify that it's a full time job.
            – Not My Real Profile
            Jul 31 '15 at 20:27












             

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