Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If DS does not get in one of his 5 schools in EA/ED, he will need to apply to a lot of schools.
How does that work? Most EA decisions are after the RD deadline.... so would you know in time?
No, they won't hear from the EA schools in time. ED schools announce in December.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If DS does not get in one of his 5 schools in EA/ED, he will need to apply to a lot of schools.
How does that work? Most EA decisions are after the RD deadline.... so would you know in time?
Anonymous wrote:WashU of course. With all the 65% return in endowment and massive $$$ they'll be stealing star professors from Stanford, MIT, and Caltech in no time and the CS department will jump from #49 to #9 in no time. All the brightest kids are heading to STL now AS A FACT.
Anonymous wrote:Stevens, Rensselaer, Lehigh, yes to NC State, all good RoI
Anonymous wrote:If DS does not get in one of his 5 schools in EA/ED, he will need to apply to a lot of schools.
Anonymous wrote:Waterloo (but your kid must be self-directed and is absolutely sure of CS). Quant/FAANG/BigN hunt there. Not great, I hear, for quality of life but fantastic reputation/outcomes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one cares where your kid goes for computer science. The degree is all that matters and the fact they have the skills and ability to do the work and keep up with new technology.
This.
It is a growing field which is not going away. If DC does well, and get the degree from almost anywhere, there will be lots of opportunities.
Good luck.
Anonymous wrote:No one cares where your kid goes for computer science. The degree is all that matters and the fact they have the skills and ability to do the work and keep up with new technology.
Anonymous wrote:Olin College might be a safety
Not sure if I missed Harvey Mudd. It is tough to get in from the East coast but a great school.