When was this? |
When did your kids get in? It definitely cannot be in recent years. May be 5 or 10 years ago??? |
What kinds of extras? |
Then it must be a lottery because my DC got deferred MIT and rejected at GA tech with *very* high stats and did some coding projects "for fun". |
clubs, activities, competitions related to CS. |
Thanks for the feedback. Are you saying UIUC and GA tech don't have that kind of flexibility to take networking or machine learning classes? This is very interesting. More info, please. |
| As a side question - is there a list of colleges that don't require direct admission as the only realistic means to obtain a CS degree? |
Most of these schools have a rigid set of requirements. Subjects like compilers or Operating Systems are typically required, but very few students will ever work in those areas. Now those are fine classes but not useful to everyone. MD has all those courses but allows students greater flexibility. Schools like GA Tech and UIUC I believe, have CS in their engineering schools and impose additional requirements unrelated to modern CS. I haven't looked at the specifics lately and could be mistaken, but I would encourage you to look at these programs more closely. Specifically look at what a 4 year plan would look like. When I was in CS, I went through an engineering program, and can tell you it just made it a lot less pleasant and there was little benefit. I didn't need to take 12 hours of physics or 12 hours of outdated electrical engineering classes. I would rather have the freedom to pursue areas of interest more deeply. This isn't possible in many programs because of the restrictions. https://undergrad.cs.umd.edu/general-track-degree-requirements |
| Thanks.. which schools are direct admits to CS/ECE and more likely than others for high stat kids? |
Any SLAC. |
Not strange at all because you don't understand how top college admissions works. Stats is only a very small part of the credentials AOs look at. You didn't mention anything else other than stats, so I guess your kid didn't have much else to show for. |
Realize that the majority of kids applying to CS are high stats. At some point it becomes luck. So "more likely" means schools with higher acceptance rates over all, or engineering schools where the overall applicant pool is already narrowed to STEM kids. |
|
Depending on which top programs you're talking about.
For CMU SCS, qualifying for USAMO helps a lot. For MIT, you probably need math Olympiad training camp (next step after USAMO) and/or significant research competition awards or experience (think STS, academic publications). Above is for non-URM boys. |
This advice is spot on. |
+1 we listened to the "be a well rounded person" and that didn't work. DC didn't focus much on CS projects, but did other activities. Very high stats. Rejected to T20 national, but in at UMD honors, in state. |