Anonymous wrote:CS majors do not need STATS. Data science sure, but not CS. AB to BC is fine if you can't do multivariable calculus.
Anonymous wrote:CS majors do not need STATS. Data science sure, but not CS. AB to BC is fine if you can't do multivariable calculus.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:CS majors do not need STATS. Data science sure, but not CS. AB to BC is fine if you can't do multivariable calculus.
CS at UMD requires stats as part of degree requirements. So that is not true.
Anonymous wrote:Why would you take calc ab and also calc bc? I thought they were the same except bc has 2 additional units. Maybe I'm missing something.
At my kid's school, you don't take both. Either do pre-calc > calc bc > multivariable or pre-calc > calc ab > stats (or some other math class that's offered)
Anonymous wrote:CS majors do not need STATS. Data science sure, but not CS. AB to BC is fine if you can't do multivariable calculus.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a prof who teaches college and graduate level statistics. I am flummoxed that stats is "Writing heavy". What are they teaching there? Are they actually teaching statistics during this course? Or is making a graph and labeling it now considered "writing"? I would definitely check into this assumption and get some feedback before you make a choice.
I agree with PPs that doing calculus and multivariable seems like a better choice. Though your DS will need to take stats, but a serious stats course appropriate for a CS major would leave writing for a different class and focus on the mathematics and perhaps, the philosophical foundations underlying the mathematics, not ask for essays.