Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For engineering and CS, maybe it doesn't matter. But to do anything interesting in those other STEM fields, yes, you need a PhD, especially if you're headed into industry jobs.
I agree with your assessment, OP. My kid goes to one of those schools mentioned above. He is majoring in my field and getting a much better undergrad education than I ever did at my DCUM-revered state flagship. Better grad school admittance is just gravy.
yes, that's why the SLACs are up there. They don't have strong Eng/CS programs.
True for engineering, though I was surprised to see that 18/50 schools on the CS list are LACs — a stronger showing than I’d have expected for that subject.
I think students who go to schools that are weak in CS for undergrad are going to seek higher degrees.
I mean, you have 3 from Millsaps College (have never heard of it) going to get a PhD in CS. Their student body is less than 1000, with a graduation rate in the low 60%. You'd need a PhD in CS if you went to a school like Millsaps College for CS.
According to this site, there were all of 2 CS undergrad majors.
https://www.collegesimply.com/colleges/mississippi/millsaps-college/majors/
CS person here who has been in high-tech my entire career. This is entirely wrong.
Anonymous wrote:CS and Math graduates from St Olaf are consistently very sharp. Weather is cold there, no doubt, but it has a great education.
Anonymous wrote:PhD?
Parents are worried about getting their kid in a T25 undergrad.
Anonymous wrote:Ugrad schools don't produce PhD students. Ugrad students make themselves into PhD students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For engineering and CS, maybe it doesn't matter. But to do anything interesting in those other STEM fields, yes, you need a PhD, especially if you're headed into industry jobs.
I agree with your assessment, OP. My kid goes to one of those schools mentioned above. He is majoring in my field and getting a much better undergrad education than I ever did at my DCUM-revered state flagship. Better grad school admittance is just gravy.
yes, that's why the SLACs are up there. They don't have strong Eng/CS programs.
True for engineering, though I was surprised to see that 18/50 schools on the CS list are LACs — a stronger showing than I’d have expected for that subject.
I think students who go to schools that are weak in CS for undergrad are going to seek higher degrees.
I mean, you have 3 from Millsaps College (have never heard of it) going to get a PhD in CS. Their student body is less than 1000, with a graduation rate in the low 60%. You'd need a PhD in CS if you went to a school like Millsaps College for CS.
According to this site, there were all of 2 CS undergrad majors.
https://www.collegesimply.com/colleges/mississippi/millsaps-college/majors/
This is 100% wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For engineering and CS, maybe it doesn't matter. But to do anything interesting in those other STEM fields, yes, you need a PhD, especially if you're headed into industry jobs.
I agree with your assessment, OP. My kid goes to one of those schools mentioned above. He is majoring in my field and getting a much better undergrad education than I ever did at my DCUM-revered state flagship. Better grad school admittance is just gravy.
yes, that's why the SLACs are up there. They don't have strong Eng/CS programs.
True for engineering, though I was surprised to see that 18/50 schools on the CS list are LACs — a stronger showing than I’d have expected for that subject.
I think students who go to schools that are weak in CS for undergrad are going to seek higher degrees.
I mean, you have 3 from Millsaps College (have never heard of it) going to get a PhD in CS. Their student body is less than 1000, with a graduation rate in the low 60%. You'd need a PhD in CS if you went to a school like Millsaps College for CS.
According to this site, there were all of 2 CS undergrad majors.
https://www.collegesimply.com/colleges/mississippi/millsaps-college/majors/
Anonymous wrote:Unless you want to be a Professor most engineering and CS majors don’t get PHds. They graduate and go to work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For engineering and CS, maybe it doesn't matter. But to do anything interesting in those other STEM fields, yes, you need a PhD, especially if you're headed into industry jobs.
I agree with your assessment, OP. My kid goes to one of those schools mentioned above. He is majoring in my field and getting a much better undergrad education than I ever did at my DCUM-revered state flagship. Better grad school admittance is just gravy.
yes, that's why the SLACs are up there. They don't have strong Eng/CS programs.
True for engineering, though I was surprised to see that 18/50 schools on the CS list are LACs — a stronger showing than I’d have expected for that subject.
I think students who go to schools that are weak in CS for undergrad are going to seek higher degrees.
I mean, you have 3 from Millsaps College (have never heard of it) going to get a PhD in CS. Their student body is less than 1000, with a graduation rate in the low 60%. You'd need a PhD in CS if you went to a school like Millsaps College for CS.
According to this site, there were all of 2 CS undergrad majors.
https://www.collegesimply.com/colleges/mississippi/millsaps-college/majors/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For engineering and CS, maybe it doesn't matter. But to do anything interesting in those other STEM fields, yes, you need a PhD, especially if you're headed into industry jobs.
I agree with your assessment, OP. My kid goes to one of those schools mentioned above. He is majoring in my field and getting a much better undergrad education than I ever did at my DCUM-revered state flagship. Better grad school admittance is just gravy.
yes, that's why the SLACs are up there. They don't have strong Eng/CS programs.
True for engineering, though I was surprised to see that 18/50 schools on the CS list are LACs — a stronger showing than I’d have expected for that subject.