Anonymous wrote:CMU average CS grad salary is 201K. Pretty jaw dropping. They are super into it. Doubt its fun to attend but it does not get more cutting edge. Of course my kid was WL.
Cornell though it is high ranked is going to be more preppy and honestly I still don't think of of it for CS. Im in software and have yet to see a Cornell developer. We cant afford the CMU ones. If you are vibe-ing with Cornell, by all means, you cant go wrong, its Ivy. But if your kid is a super geek gonna-make-a-billion in CS, CMU is the place.
That said, It seemed like your kid wanted a more balanced life so maybe Cornell.
Anonymous wrote:Cornell hasn’t released decisions yet ?
Anonymous wrote:Does any9one have recent experience with Caltech? It seems super small and would have fewer opportunities than MIT for a kid that could get accepted to that kind of place
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD is going to transfer from CMU, CS major, to another school after her freshman year there. CS is a very tough program and DD feels miserable there. CS @CMU is for someone who is smart, works hard, and does nothing but studying all day long. DD feels like it is not the place for her.
CMU CS is super intense. If your kid is serious about CS, CMU. If your kid wants a more "fun" experience, don't do CMU.
My high stats CS majoring DC looked at CMU, was serious about attending, #1 choice. But, after hearing about the lack of social life and not being a fun environment, they decided that environment was not for them. I think DC could've handled the rigor but not the lack of social life.
Anonymous wrote:DD is going to transfer from CMU, CS major, to another school after her freshman year there. CS is a very tough program and DD feels miserable there. CS @CMU is for someone who is smart, works hard, and does nothing but studying all day long. DD feels like it is not the place for her.
Anonymous wrote:DD is going to transfer from CMU, CS major, to another school after her freshman year there. CS is a very tough program and DD feels miserable there. CS @CMU is for someone who is smart, works hard, and does nothing but studying all day long. DD feels like it is not the place for her.
Anonymous wrote:
CMU isn't in that Stanford and MIT league for CS either
and isn't pumping out unicorn founders lately (not that MIT has been either).
Anonymous wrote:I have one at Cornell and he had a few friends who had to make a decision between SCS and Cornell COE CS.
He says the hardcore CS will go to CMU SCS. Competitive programming types who live and breathe CS. The others, who are also great at CS but have broader interests go to Cornell.
While CMU is a top 4 CS school, Cornell CS is still a top 5 program (in reality, there are probably 4 schools that have a claim at #5) but the difference is Cornell is top 10 in many disparate , other fields than CMU. That interaction with those others is part of what defines Cornell.
Obviously CMU is in a nicer city though.