And most of them received better education than most Americans. Probably better than your average UVA CS grad. |
+1. It took me three years after my sub-par UVA Eng. BSCS degree to catch up and be an equal contributor. |
Should have gone to Virginia Tech! |
I'm in no way related to UVA, but I suspect the "3 years to catch up" is a reflection of you rather than the school TBH. I know kids who graduated in 3 to 3.5 years that are doing extremely well. |
+1 People vary in how well they translate their school skills to work. So you could do well in an academic program and still be shaky at applying it. How did you do in internships etc. along the way? My experience with UVA BSCS grads is very good. |
My nephew got into UVA but not Tech Engineering. |
+1 Fellow UVA E-school CS alum. The overall school experience matters as well. The education is a bit cookie-cutter, meaning it offers a very traditional theoretical curriculum. You could find similar course progression at most schools that are not the MITs or the CMUs of the world. But I don't regret my experience as it gave me a solid engineering foundation with enough CS to not ever needing to go back for a masters. |
Not a bad choice, same level as VT CS |
You don’t have to go to the MIT’s or CMU’s of the world to get a strong STEM education. Unfortunately, the UVA’s of the world really don’t provide it. |
HAHA. I know a UVA kid now doing a PhD in electrical engineering at Princeton. |
There are always outliers. UVA is not know for STEM. This is nothing new. |
Yes, UVA is a terrible, terrible choice for CS and engineering. Please do not apply. Every year tons of Virginia kids get rejected and pay double to attend other programs. Thank you for dissing the program so that others may face better admission odds. |
They can go to VT, W&M, or even GMU, and the outcome would be the same if rejected by UVA and money is an issue. |
+1 My niece's boyfriend is already in 6 figures just 4 years out of UVa engineering. There's nothing wrong with the program. |
Not being known for something doesn't mean you're weak at it! MIT isn't known for Russian and Eurasian Studies. Do you think that means its graduates won't find good jobs? UVa is strong across the board. |