Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Computer Science is huge at GMU. http://cs.gmu.edu/. Serious Game Design as well. You have to be accepted into the programs, however, because they are in such demand. Game Design applicants must submit portfolios. The departments meet monthly with the Dulles corridor hi-tech companies to work with them to handle contracts (some students are paid to work on them) and to assess need. The average graduate in computer science makes more than the average UVA and William and Mary graduate (per President Cabrera). The internaitonal student body is immense, as are out-of-state students. Fourteen admissions counselors handle the international students alone. 35,000 students attend, 1/3 of which are Doct. or Masters' candidates. 12,750 live on campus and the construction there never ends. Please go visit and read up on what's in your own backyard. It's an astonishing institution that the state legislature has pumped millions into. Facilities are new and state-of-the art. The engineering schools are also well regarded. And Mason just opened its North Korean campus last year.
Please remove your post, my kids will be applying there in a couple of years.![]()
. Good luck by then. We got one into GMU and are aiming another at UVA and Va Tech, but if the OOS and International rates keep rising there may be so few Virginia seats left that you may not want to even bother applying. Anonymous wrote:Good - I'm glad for that. I guess though someone ought to tell all the international students and the out-of-state students.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've heard GMU has a really strong Computer Science program.
My son is in it. Fantastic. And they are committed to working with local industry to help your kid get a job. Hope it remains a sleeper school!!
No worries about that. It's been sleeping since day one and will remain unknown outside of the Fairfax area.
Anonymous wrote:One GMU grad made a gazillion dollars in Silicon Valley, then came back to fund venture capital in the Dulles Corridor. The Wash. Post did a story on him. Believe is or not, GMU is no. 6 in the country for computer science and the employers know it. https://blog.profitbricks.com/top-computer-science-programs/. We have a child there now (living on campus with all the international students and out-of-staters - definitely NOT a commuter school except for the Master's and Ph.D. sutdents) and have been extraordinarily pleased with his instructors - many of whom come from the Dulles Tech Corridor and teach for the love of it. DC has a paid internship at the Serious Game Design Institute of Mason in Manassas this summer and second DD has a paid internship at Oracle. No other University is feeding the massive growth of Tysons and the Tech Corridor and Mason has done a brilliant job of coordinating the Dulles companies with Computer Science, Engineering (a huge department!) and Game Design to both service the needs of the companies as well as give their students paying work while still on campus. Go check out the names and companies on the Board of Trustees and the individual executive advisory boards of every department if you don't believe this. And, no, before someone says it, I'm not in marketing or PR for the university - that charge gets SO old.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I make more than most uva grads ever will. I own my own business and wanted a master's degree but didn't want to put my business on hold. Gmu was a convenient way and a lot of self made millionaires get a degree to check that box after they are making it big.
We are talking about college choice for kids graduating high school. Also if you are already a self made millionaire then who are you checking the box for?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Still waiting to hear about the "7 figure recent grad"...
He works for Google.
http://money.cnn.com/2015/04/09/technology/google-people-laszlo-bock/index.html?iid=Lead
Anonymous wrote:Still waiting to hear about the "7 figure recent grad"...

Anonymous wrote:I make more than most uva grads ever will. I own my own business and wanted a master's degree but didn't want to put my business on hold. Gmu was a convenient way and a lot of self made millionaires get a degree to check that box after they are making it big.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NOONE cares where you went to college except those who went to the Ivies and like to throw it in your face.
Once you've been working for a few years, it's really all about your experience, your personality, your work ethic and how well you produce.
*I* care where I went to undergrad/grad. Outside of academics, there are many aspects that shaped who I am today. Not to mention my lifelong friends. Alumni opportunities, networking, etc.
Anonymous wrote:NOONE cares where you went to college except those who went to the Ivies and like to throw it in your face.
Once you've been working for a few years, it's really all about your experience, your personality, your work ethic and how well you produce.
Anonymous wrote:NOONE cares where you went to college except those who went to the Ivies and like to throw it in your face.
Once you've been working for a few years, it's really all about your experience, your personality, your work ethic and how well you produce.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't pick GMU over UVA for any subject.
+1.
This. GMU sucks.