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Between the Lines

Larry Dignan, Andrew Nusca and Rachel King

Missouri State, IBM launch IT services degree

By | September 19, 2007, 11:32am PDT

Missouri State University and IBM plan to team up on a Bachelor of Science degree in IT service management.

Think of it as a degree in Big Blue’s biggest business.

The IT services degree will be the first of its kind in the U.S. and has been “created in collaboration with IBM’s IT Service Curriculum.” Missouri State confers the degree.

Aside from the obvious benefit of potential employment at IBM this degree program is long overdue. IT is services–managing partners, managing vendors and herding all the outsourced cats that keep a technology department running.

Too often, technology departments aren’t equipped to manage these moving parts.

IBM will provide course material such as lab exercises, class assignments and case studies. There will also be role playing exercises to see how customers handle IT outages, changes and upgrades (hope these kids have helmets). Here’s the pitch from a statement:

IT Service Management is an emerging discipline for the management of IT services, resources, and systems. An IT service can be defined as any service process delivered by an IT department to support critical business functions. Graduates of Missouri State’s IT Service Management program will be marketable for jobs across a range of industries such as financial services, healthcare and retail, as consultants, architects, IT managers, project managers, IT specialists, marketing and sales leads, entrepreneurs and executives. Through the new curriculum, students will learn to use technology for service delivery and support to better manage people, processes and assets.

Sounds good. And how can IBM turn down a student in a program Big Blue helped create?

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Larry Dignan is Editor in Chief of ZDNet and SmartPlanet as well as Editorial Director of ZDNet's sister site TechRepublic.

Disclosure

Larry Dignan

Larry Dignan has nothing to disclose. He doesn’t hold investments in the technology companies he covers.

Biography

Larry Dignan

Larry Dignan is Editor in Chief of ZDNet and SmartPlanet as well as Editorial Director of ZDNet's sister site TechRepublic. He was most recently Executive Editor of News and Blogs at ZDNet. Prior to that he was executive news editor at eWeek and news editor at Baseline. He also served as the East Coast news editor and finance editor at CNET News.com. Larry has covered the technology and financial services industry since 1995, publishing articles in WallStreetWeek.com, Inter@ctive Week, The New York Times, and Financial Planning magazine. He's a graduate of the Columbia School of Journalism and the University of Delaware.

For daily updates, follow Larry on Twitter.

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RE: Missouri State, IBM launch IT services degree
xss5000 6th Aug 2008
I AM FINE AND WAITING FOR THE NEW VERSION OF THIS MODEL.
Missouri Treatment Centers
0 Votes
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hmm...
BFD 19th Sep 2007
I have to ask what the heck? How is it that a vendor can come into a university and set up a program to train students on how to use IBM's products and services?

What if Sun, Oracle or Microsoft did such a thing? Do you think its ethical for a university to support such a program?

I'm on the fence with this one.
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they do...
Monkey_MCSE 19th Sep 2007
Most of them go through Community Colleges, but Oracle, Sun AND MS all have the same thing. I haven't seen much at the normal state universities, but they are out there.
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guess I should mention...
Monkey_MCSE 19th Sep 2007
the Community College courses are normally 4-6 weeks and go towards getting your certifications, but guess who funds those courses, Cisco, MS, Sun, Oracle, etc. Not the same, but in the long run, you can use those credits towards your degree in most cases.
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I've seen full diploma courses
voska 19th Sep 2007
Offer by Microsoft Gold partners that end up getting you your MCSE and a ton more. It's basically a IT diploma that gets a lot of funding from Microsoft.
I would think that this would fit best as a set of courses within an overall MIS curriculum, not as a standalone degree that might very well miss more of what is needed to have a successful career in IT.
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A lot of degrees don't mean much
voska 19th Sep 2007
The thing is Education started becoming a money making business in the late 70s and early 80s. They sold kid in school on the whole idea of getting an education. Then they started offering basket weaving courses and convince kids that they could make huge money with a degree in basket weaving. What they got stuck with is a job in fast food and huge student loans that will follow them to their grave. This course just stinks of this money grabbing type scheme.

Look at the scam Microsoft pulled with the MCSE. A useless piece of paper that seems to be more detrimental than beneficial and you pay through the nose to get and keep it. I've heard employer who see the words MCSE on a resume and throw it out.
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Gotta go with the market demands.
HypnoToad72 19th Sep 2007
I'm surprised Microsoft isn't doing more of this sort of thing.

Of course, if the market keeps shifting as rapidly, all that hard work and money poured into Platform X becomes worthless, and one has to re-do it all over again for Platform Y. That would burn ANYBODY out; especially if the jobs aren't paying well. After all, a Bachelors degree being required for even an entry level Help Desk support job; nobody would plonk down $50k+ for a Bachelor of Science (B.S.) degree for a job that wouldn't get them paying back the loans any time soon.
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Help Desk jobs
voska 19th Sep 2007
I've never seen a help desk job ask for degree of any sort. I suppose one could but who'd do it? The asking wage would be too high. You hear about stuff like this then wonder why they have to off shore the jobs to India. With requirements like that nobody here will take the job knowing they will get help desk wages.
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Oh, but they do require degrees
tallguy779 20th Sep 2007
You haven't looked lately. I've seen helpdesk jobs that require a degree, MCSE, CCNA, A+, Net+ and whatever other you can think of. It's like an HR thing. It would not surprise me to see a requirement of 2 years of Vista experience on a job request.

The thing is, helpdesk has morphed into something that if a monkey could read and talk, it could do it. You know, with all the script reading and such going on today. Oh yeah, did I mention that these jobs pay about $14 per hour and still require all that? It's no wonder that the certs have very little value when you consider that.
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Are you talking ITIL?
Roger Ramjet 20th Sep 2007
Never mind that IBM rejected me many times for this kind of job (Masters degree, 20 years of related experience). Never mind that ITIL is BASICALLY just common sense - written down. Never mind that IBM ONLY takes people with EXACTLY the right EXPERIENCE. Never mind that IBM would rather export a job to India than hire some podunk newbie from Misery.

This appears to be JUST a PR move from IBM.
I AM FINE AND WAITING FOR THE NEW VERSION OF THIS MODEL.
Missouri Treatment Centers

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