Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here is my take on this. Most CS jobs do NOT require a CS degree to do the job. Most developers in the DMV are just coders. It might make a difference elsewhere but not in the DMV as far as I can tell. Landing a CS job is also more about who you know than what you know. I can hire someone with a CS degree from GMU and that person can do just as good a job as someone with a CS degree from UMD or UVA. In fact, I had to turn down a CS major candidate for an internship at my company for someone studying liberal arts and minor in CS from Goucher (I didn't even know Goucher is a college until I looked it up). He was chosen over the UMD candidate because my boss knows his parents. It is what it is but who you know matter a whole lot more. YMMV.
Most jobs do not need a college degree likewise.
and networking/connecis a good source for job hunting as always has been. What's your point? Yawn
Anonymous wrote:Here is my take on this. Most CS jobs do NOT require a CS degree to do the job. Most developers in the DMV are just coders. It might make a difference elsewhere but not in the DMV as far as I can tell. Landing a CS job is also more about who you know than what you know. I can hire someone with a CS degree from GMU and that person can do just as good a job as someone with a CS degree from UMD or UVA. In fact, I had to turn down a CS major candidate for an internship at my company for someone studying liberal arts and minor in CS from Goucher (I didn't even know Goucher is a college until I looked it up). He was chosen over the UMD candidate because my boss knows his parents. It is what it is but who you know matter a whole lot more. YMMV.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Big school = better exposure to industry and research, which can be enriching. I remember on CS professor I had, on the last day of class, would show us the stuff he was working on. That was super-cool and also motivating.
Small school = possibly closer interaction with faculty. If they get a balanced education, for example they can write or present well, even better.
There's a shortage of CS people and that's not going to change, so job prospects good either way.
Is there still a shortage of CS folks? Tech companies have laid off tons of thousands in the past few months.
Just stop. The layoffs were less than 1%.
The tech industry needs people not the other way around and will for years to come.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Internships are key to landing a good job after you graduate. It is not an easy major. You have to slog through it.
I doubt that CS at SLACs is as good as at big universities
That's your take perhaps. Many enjoy it, not "slog through" it. CS at SLACs can be just as good - it all depends on what kind of experience you're looking for. At the end of the 4 years, you learn the same essential material.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Big school = better exposure to industry and research, which can be enriching. I remember on CS professor I had, on the last day of class, would show us the stuff he was working on. That was super-cool and also motivating.
Small school = possibly closer interaction with faculty. If they get a balanced education, for example they can write or present well, even better.
There's a shortage of CS people and that's not going to change, so job prospects good either way.
Is there still a shortage of CS folks? Tech companies have laid off tons of thousands in the past few months.
What you are hearing about is the big ticket tech jobs at Amazon, Twitter, FB....
There are a ton of tech jobs open in other industries, like in finance, or even smaller IT firms. They just won't pay the big salaries. There are a few articles about how these laid off tech people are being gobbled up. The ones that are going to have a harder time finding something else are those who are in non tech roles.
There's a paywall here, but you can get the gist of it from the headline and first paragraph.
https://www.wsj.com/articles/laid-off-tech-workers-quickly-find-new-jobs-11672097730
-someone in tech
WSJ is a rag. However, your thought process is correct.
Plenty of tech jobs will be for many years to come well at least til 2024 then the economy will tank people will lose a ton of jobs in all sectors because we will elect a Republcian and we all know what will happen. Not like Dems haven't been cleaning up that mess every single time.
Maybe I'm just old, but when did WSJ become a rag? It was a quite a reputable business/economy oriented newspaper. Their opinion pieces are right leaning but the news articles are not.
Anonymous wrote:Big school = better exposure to industry and research, which can be enriching. I remember on CS professor I had, on the last day of class, would show us the stuff he was working on. That was super-cool and also motivating.
Small school = possibly closer interaction with faculty. If they get a balanced education, for example they can write or present well, even better.
There's a shortage of CS people and that's not going to change, so job prospects good either way.
Anonymous wrote:Internships are key to landing a good job after you graduate. It is not an easy major. You have to slog through it.
I doubt that CS at SLACs is as good as at big universities
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Big school = better exposure to industry and research, which can be enriching. I remember on CS professor I had, on the last day of class, would show us the stuff he was working on. That was super-cool and also motivating.
Small school = possibly closer interaction with faculty. If they get a balanced education, for example they can write or present well, even better.
There's a shortage of CS people and that's not going to change, so job prospects good either way.
Is there still a shortage of CS folks? Tech companies have laid off tons of thousands in the past few months.
They laid off do-nothing deadweight.
Yep it was overstuffed companies getting rid of low performers and non-tech jobs that probably should not have existed in the first place.
Most of them are probably the ones who write and communicate well but non-technical.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Big school = better exposure to industry and research, which can be enriching. I remember on CS professor I had, on the last day of class, would show us the stuff he was working on. That was super-cool and also motivating.
Small school = possibly closer interaction with faculty. If they get a balanced education, for example they can write or present well, even better.
There's a shortage of CS people and that's not going to change, so job prospects good either way.
Is there still a shortage of CS folks? Tech companies have laid off tons of thousands in the past few months.
Tech person here. Yes, there's a shortage, and that's going to remain the trend.
Think of it this way: are computers more or less involved in life than 5 or 10 years ago? That trend isn't changing. That's creating more and more demand for people with IT skills.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Big school = better exposure to industry and research, which can be enriching. I remember on CS professor I had, on the last day of class, would show us the stuff he was working on. That was super-cool and also motivating.
Small school = possibly closer interaction with faculty. If they get a balanced education, for example they can write or present well, even better.
There's a shortage of CS people and that's not going to change, so job prospects good either way.
I have a recent CS graduate (big state school) with several friends in CS from smaller schools. All of them have had a hard time finding jobs. While there are plenty of tech jobs out there, most want 1-3 years experience, which for kids who couldn't find internships in the past 2 years is a little problematic. There also seems to be some hiring hesitation with recent and possible economic uncertainty in the next year or two. Not that tech doesn't need workers, they just want experience and aren't investing in training recent graduates. Landscape should change in the next 5 years, but wherever your student ends up, make sure they invest in building connections while an undergrad.
Anonymous wrote:What are the benefits to being a computer science major at a small liberal arts school versus being a computer science major at a bigger university where you might be in the engineering school or the school of arts and sciences depending on the university’s options. Does either generally fair better in terms of getting jobs or into graduate programs after college?
Looking for knowledge to help my high school junior in their college search. Most likely wants to major in computer science or maybe computer engineering and minor in business/economics . Thanks for any advice in this arena. Strong academic student with high gpa and high tests scores which they will be able to submit anywhere.
Anonymous wrote:Big school = better exposure to industry and research, which can be enriching. I remember on CS professor I had, on the last day of class, would show us the stuff he was working on. That was super-cool and also motivating.
Small school = possibly closer interaction with faculty. If they get a balanced education, for example they can write or present well, even better.
There's a shortage of CS people and that's not going to change, so job prospects good either way.