First piece of advice is don't.
Second piece of advice is if you aren't going to tick some federal diversity checkbox, seriously don't.
Third piece of advice if you feel like ignoring the first two, is get relevant experience. Apply to every internship you see, do not graduate without relevant work experience.
There is only one IT Job that has been in demand for the past 50+ years, and that is embedded systems programmer. If you don't hate yourself, I would recommend networking; but that shit about to under go some serious seismic shifts as SDN starts to take off.
1. Get experience.
2. An associate's is more than enough for IT. Anything over that is overkill.
3. Get your A+ certification.
Experience > Degree, but Degrees do help get you to the top of the pile. Every job I've had but one, everyone had a bachelors. Its also easier to just roll through another two years of school than to stop and start again when you're looking to move up in the world.
College level classes in mathematics help with helping work with numbers, and basic college english will help you learn to write like an adult and convey your points. Its not wasted.
But always experience first.