Cs is more than just writing code. |
Similar threads every month: https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/1287015.page |
Yup, and those posting about CS don't even understand its more than just coding. |
We understand recent graduates can’t get jobs. |
NRO.mil is hiring CS grads who are US citizens. Great place to get a start with hands-on experience. Did yours apply? |
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I know SOOO many places hiring CS grads.
Rigor matters. Students who take the rigorous upper-level elective classes, like compilers, real-time/embedded systems, C/UNIX programming, are not having a lot of trouble finding jobs. Students who focused on easier electives, such as web tools and web scripting, are in surplus and have a lot more trouble finding work. |
It would appear over 93% CAN get jobs. |
Yes. The problem is that the tech world, unlike other jobs, pivots very quickly, so your tech skills can become obsolete in a matter of a couple of years. It's high risk but high rewards. The low level programming jobs have mostly left the country to offshore or AI. That ship has sailed a long time ago. I've worked in tech since 1998, and pivoted to PM roles about 8 years ago. |
In CS? That’s a huge assumption. |
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If you love CS, major in CS.
If you just want a job, major in something else you might enjoy. |
| Major in what instead. AI? 🤣 |
+1 Also, pair the CS degree with another degree. Or do engineering and minor in CS, or do economics and minor in CS. Find a meaningful path for using your CS and you will be just fine. And yes, be good at it. If you have a 3.5+ in any CS/Engineering major, you will go far. If you can barely get a 3.0, you will still get a job, but wont be able to be as choosy initially |
Psst, AI is a part of CS. |
It's math. If new CS grads have 7% unemployment, 93% must be employed or in grad school. |
Wow, talk about not understanding the jobs data ... given that you don't actually know how many are in job-specific CS roles vs social media/gig-economy vs grad school, your 93% number is utterly meaningless ... |