Medicine
bearodactylmath w/ concentration in computing at umass amherst (tryna double major in philosophy as well)
yussss
yussss
wolsnedgitluniversity of central florida, computer science and gonna try to specialize in computer security and forensicsHow are your professors? I have a good handful of friends who took compsci classes at UCF and were quite miserable with the experience
Im in my first semester so I cant speak to all CS professors, but my intro to c professor is pretty awful. I took AP CSP/A in high school so I have programming background, but if it wasn't for that I would probably be a little lost. I've heard from many people that there are really great professors in the CS department, though.
How are your professors? I have a good handful of friends who took compsci classes at UCF and were quite miserable with the experience[/quote]
Im in my first semester so I cant speak to all CS professors, but my intro to c professor is pretty awful. I took AP CSP/A in high school so I have programming background, but if it wasn't for that I would probably be a little lost. I've heard from many people that there are really great professors in the CS department, though.
aerospace engineering at the university of cincinnati.
I finished my GRFP application, feel fairly confident & submitting tomorrow
if I get it, theres advisors at Harvard & GA tech who are kinda interested in my stuff (also one at MIT but he does open ocean so eh)
if I dont prolly just gonna stay at my brewery tho
if I get it, theres advisors at Harvard & GA tech who are kinda interested in my stuff (also one at MIT but he does open ocean so eh)
if I dont prolly just gonna stay at my brewery tho
university of vermont, currently majoring in english but it's always open to change.
I'm 13. I want to go to a college that has a good computer course, however. Suggestions?
a_m3meI'm 13. I want to go to a college that has a good computer course, however. Suggestions?
get good grades and do cool extracurriculars. don't worry about where you're going until late into your junior year, there's no point in trying to plan out where you'll go to college before you even take the SAT/ACT.
get good grades and do cool extracurriculars. don't worry about where you're going until late into your junior year, there's no point in trying to plan out where you'll go to college before you even take the SAT/ACT.
Funsguess I’ll start uk unis
biomed @ imperial college london, first year
biomed @ imperial college london, first year[/quote]
a_m3meI'm 13. I want to go to a college that has a good computer course, however. Suggestions?
Depends on what state you're in. You or your parents might want to consider that, generally, out-of-state tuition is much higher than in-state. "Good" can be very subjective for universities. Depends on if you're looking for quality instruction, a prestigious name on your degree, good experience, or a party school. Here in California, USC would be a good but very expensive choice if you want to network with business people. Stanford, UC Berkeley, [edit: Caltech,] and UCLA are the most prestigious here. Quality of instruction is probably iffy. If you go to Berkeley, major in EECS not CS. I've heard bad things about University of Maryland for CS. UPENN is supposed to be the toughest for engineering, so probably not much nicer for CS.
I'd also recommend going to community college and then transferring to a university for junior year (unless you get a really good score on the SAT). A good community college is usually much cheaper than a university. The classes are also easier. The downside is you miss out on the "college experience," but CS/engineering majors are usually too busy to have fun anyway.
That said, for a career in CS/programming, I've heard that prior coding experience is more important than the degree itself. Companies want to hire competent programmers, not students who can bring home a good report card. Put some time and effort into extracurriculars and programming projects. (But also get good grades. Never hurts.)
Depends on what state you're in. You or your parents might want to consider that, generally, out-of-state tuition is much higher than in-state. "Good" can be very subjective for universities. Depends on if you're looking for quality instruction, a prestigious name on your degree, good experience, or a party school. Here in California, USC would be a good but very expensive choice if you want to network with business people. Stanford, UC Berkeley, [edit: Caltech,] and UCLA are the most prestigious here. Quality of instruction is probably iffy. If you go to Berkeley, major in EECS not CS. I've heard bad things about University of Maryland for CS. UPENN is supposed to be the toughest for engineering, so probably not much nicer for CS.
I'd also recommend going to community college and then transferring to a university for junior year (unless you get a really good score on the SAT). A good community college is usually much cheaper than a university. The classes are also easier. The downside is you miss out on the "college experience," but CS/engineering majors are usually too busy to have fun anyway.
That said, for a career in CS/programming, I've heard that prior coding experience is more important than the degree itself. Companies want to hire competent programmers, not students who can bring home a good report card. Put some time and effort into extracurriculars and programming projects. (But also get good grades. Never hurts.)
history education @ rvc till i transfer to niu in 2020
electronic engineering at city of glasgow college hopefully i can get into strathclyde uni with my hnd when i get it xoxo
Analytical Chemistry major at George Mason in VA but I'm transferring up to UMASS amherst or UNH
Bilberta_m3meI'm 13. I want to go to a college that has a good computer course, however. Suggestions?Depends on what state you're in. You or your parents might want to consider that, generally, out-of-state tuition is much higher than in-state. "Good" can be very subjective for universities. Depends on if you're looking for quality instruction, a prestigious name on your degree, good experience, or a party school. Here in California, USC would be a good but very expensive choice if you want to network with business people. Stanford, UC Berkeley, and UCLA are the most prestigious here. Quality of instruction is probably iffy. If you go to Berkeley, major in EECS not CS. I've heard bad things about University of Maryland for CS. UPENN is supposed to be the toughest for engineering, so probably not much nicer for CS.
I'd also recommend going to community college and then transferring to a university for junior year (unless you get a really good score on the SAT). A good community college is usually much cheaper than a university. The classes are also easier. The downside is you miss out on the "college experience," but CS/engineering majors are usually too busy to have fun anyway.
That said, for a career in CS/programming, I've heard that prior coding experience is more important than the degree itself. Companies want to hire competent programmers, not students who can bring home a good report card. Put some time and effort into extracurriculars and programming projects. (But also get good grades. Never hurts.)
Berkeley EECS student here, I'm curious why you think majoring in CS here isn't worth it. Meeting the 3.3 GPA cutoff to declare CS can be stressful, but over half the kids that want to declare CS do so. Once you declare the CS major, EECS and CS are identical in terms of degrees except EECS being a Bachelors of Science and CS being a Bachelors of Arts. EECS and CS take the same classes and have the same degree requirements too (different breadth requirements though). Employment wise they are practically the same too with median starting salaries for both at ~110k. There isn't any difference between EECS and CS for grad school admissions either, if anything, majoring in CS frees up space to take more upper div math and stats classes which can be beneficial.
EDIT: Also in terms of quality of instruction, all my EECS classes have been taught by full professors and considering they are EECS professors at Berkeley, they are some of the best. I think the quality of instruction is pretty high. Also in terms of difficulty, I would say that MIT and Berkeley are more difficult than other top CS programs just because there's pretty insane grade deflation here at Cal and MIT doesn't practice grade inflation either (unlike other schools like Stanford, Penn etc)
Depends on what state you're in. You or your parents might want to consider that, generally, out-of-state tuition is much higher than in-state. "Good" can be very subjective for universities. Depends on if you're looking for quality instruction, a prestigious name on your degree, good experience, or a party school. Here in California, USC would be a good but very expensive choice if you want to network with business people. Stanford, UC Berkeley, and UCLA are the most prestigious here. Quality of instruction is probably iffy. If you go to Berkeley, major in EECS not CS. I've heard bad things about University of Maryland for CS. UPENN is supposed to be the toughest for engineering, so probably not much nicer for CS.
I'd also recommend going to community college and then transferring to a university for junior year (unless you get a really good score on the SAT). A good community college is usually much cheaper than a university. The classes are also easier. The downside is you miss out on the "college experience," but CS/engineering majors are usually too busy to have fun anyway.
That said, for a career in CS/programming, I've heard that prior coding experience is more important than the degree itself. Companies want to hire competent programmers, not students who can bring home a good report card. Put some time and effort into extracurriculars and programming projects. (But also get good grades. Never hurts.)[/quote]
Berkeley EECS student here, I'm curious why you think majoring in CS here isn't worth it. Meeting the 3.3 GPA cutoff to declare CS can be stressful, but over half the kids that want to declare CS do so. Once you declare the CS major, EECS and CS are identical in terms of degrees except EECS being a Bachelors of Science and CS being a Bachelors of Arts. EECS and CS take the same classes and have the same degree requirements too (different breadth requirements though). Employment wise they are practically the same too with median starting salaries for both at ~110k. There isn't any difference between EECS and CS for grad school admissions either, if anything, majoring in CS frees up space to take more upper div math and stats classes which can be beneficial.
EDIT: Also in terms of quality of instruction, all my EECS classes have been taught by full professors and considering they are EECS professors at Berkeley, they are some of the best. I think the quality of instruction is pretty high. Also in terms of difficulty, I would say that MIT and Berkeley are more difficult than other top CS programs just because there's pretty insane grade deflation here at Cal and MIT doesn't practice grade inflation either (unlike other schools like Stanford, Penn etc)
eeeI finished my GRFP application, feel fairly confident & submitting tomorrow
if I get it, theres advisors at Harvard & GA tech who are kinda interested in my stuff (also one at MIT but he does open ocean so eh)
doesnt nsf announce the awards well after admissions? expressly to avoid having the GRFP affect admissions?
if I get it, theres advisors at Harvard & GA tech who are kinda interested in my stuff (also one at MIT but he does open ocean so eh)[/quote]
doesnt nsf announce the awards well after admissions? expressly to avoid having the GRFP affect admissions?
CleepopleBilberta_m3meI'm 13. I want to go to a college that has a good computer course, however. Suggestions?
A BA in CS from Berkeley is nothing to sneeze at. It's going to get you as far in the computing world as an EECS BS will. My opinion is that, if you're going for a computing degree from Berkeley, EECS is the simpler path to getting the degree. It gets that GPA cutoff out of the way. And they keep raising the cutoff point. It depends on what you want though. The College of Engineering is harder to get into straight out of highschool.
If you're transferring from community college, definitely go EECS. You get admitted straight into the major. Even as a junior transfer to CS, you get admitted to L&S and still have to apply to the CS major.
What year are you? I admit I'm not working from first-hand experience for the quality of instruction. I've heard from Mech Engie undergrads that the professors at Berkeley are dreadful. Especially transfer students notice that their community college professors were much better at teaching. Usually, professors at top institutions are there because they do good graduate-level research, not because they are good at teaching undergraduates.
Edit: Also, I have a compilation of rude, discouraging, and straight up mean remarks that current and former Berkeley professors have made to their students.
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A BA in CS from Berkeley is nothing to sneeze at. It's going to get you as far in the computing world as an EECS BS will. My opinion is that, if you're going for a computing degree from Berkeley, EECS is the simpler path to getting the degree. It gets that GPA cutoff out of the way. And they keep raising the cutoff point. It depends on what you want though. The College of Engineering is harder to get into straight out of highschool.
If you're transferring from community college, definitely go EECS. You get admitted straight into the major. Even as a junior transfer to CS, you get admitted to L&S and still have to apply to the CS major.
What year are you? I admit I'm not working from first-hand experience for the quality of instruction. I've heard from Mech Engie undergrads that the professors at Berkeley are dreadful. Especially transfer students notice that their community college professors were much better at teaching. Usually, professors at top institutions are there because they do good graduate-level research, not because they are good at teaching undergraduates.
Edit: Also, I have a compilation of rude, discouraging, and straight up mean remarks that current and former Berkeley professors have made to their students.
poopsharkeeeI finished my GRFP application, feel fairly confident & submitting tomorrowdoesnt nsf announce the awards well after admissions? expressly to avoid having the GRFP affect admissions?
if I get it, theres advisors at Harvard & GA tech who are kinda interested in my stuff (also one at MIT but he does open ocean so eh)
in theory. in my field, advisors can pretty much take you on whenever they want, especially if you're independently funded
my proposal was basically derived from my work, anyway, and the potential advisors whove seen it felt confident in my chances (as confident as can be at least), and I'm kinda half sure I'll be able to make two Applications b/c the rules are weird
did you submit anything? shit v nearly killed me, I spent prolly 20 hours a weekend on it this month
if I get it, theres advisors at Harvard & GA tech who are kinda interested in my stuff (also one at MIT but he does open ocean so eh)[/quote]
doesnt nsf announce the awards well after admissions? expressly to avoid having the GRFP affect admissions?[/quote]
in theory. in my field, advisors can pretty much take you on whenever they want, especially if you're independently funded
my proposal was basically derived from my work, anyway, and the potential advisors whove seen it felt confident in my chances (as confident as can be at least), and I'm kinda half sure I'll be able to make two Applications b/c the rules are weird
did you submit anything? shit v nearly killed me, I spent prolly 20 hours a weekend on it this month
Gonna be heading to SMU for school this fall, if anyone's in the Dallas/FW Area HMU
Heading down to university of victoria this fall for Biochemistry/Chemistry
reakomathematics at uc san diego
Yo, I’m starting in data science there next year!
Yo, I’m starting in data science there next year!
Business Entrepreneurship at Seneca College in the Fall :)