With AI more and more entrepreneurs will create one or two person companies. |
CS majors from non SLACs also take non CS classes, like Gen Eds. Same as SLACs. What non CS class are CS majors at SLACs having to take that others don't? |
+1 exactly. They may not get the $120K starting salary + signing bonus, but they are still way more employable for jobs that pay decently than humanities majors. |
It’s not a dip in the market, it’s a boom of graduates. This is the generation of kids who grew up playing video games, love spending time on computers, and were told 6, 8, 10 years ago that we needed many more CS graduates, which at the time we did. But over the past 6 years there’s been plenty of graduates to fill that need, while CS undergraduate enrollment had exploded. Definitely oversupply right now. |
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why is DCUM assuming comp sci majors have no writing skills?
why is dcum assuming english majors have math skills? why is dcum assuming comp sci majors have lesser social skills than english majors? |
Yes indeed, and not just for jobs—50% of ivy/plus kids go to grad school, PhD MD JD, and typically the “average” grad of these schools still land top grad &professional school placement. |
Exactly. From the relentless threads around here, everyone got that memo. But of course the real goal was wage suppression, the employers have what they want. |
Ones where there are extensive readings, small seminars lead by professors, and writing read by professors and graded on more than mechanics. |
PP, DS's 100 level "academic writing" class at UMD had 17 students and was taught by a professor. Can't speak to the grading criteria beyond "mechanics". |
Birth rate has been declining steadily, and they expect a college age cliff. Those who are graduating now were born in 2002/3.
There will be even less CS grads in the next 10 to 15 years. At that point, today's grads will be in their 30s, still working age. There will still be CS jobs that need filling in that timeframe. |
So, all those grads who majored in English who can't find good jobs.. is there any oversupply of English major grads? I guess so, which is why some colleges are getting rid of their English major, and instead focusing on business or CS majors. Even SLACs are now offering CS major. |
No reputable college worth its money is getting rid of the English major. Even look at CMU. With very few social and humanities majors there, they still have an English department and major. |
I think they’re finding jobs. Just not high-paying ones? |
In what way, Shakespeare? |
It's also driving a certification industry. You learn just enough to get the necessary certifications. Once everyone has that certificate, then there will be another certificate. Do you have a relevant degee or experience? No, but I have the government required certifications. "Good enough." |