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snit

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Posts posted by snit

  1. I'm finally getting around to finalizing my list of schools, and am trying to figure out what some good safetys would be. I'm planning to apply to Stanford, Princeton, CMU, and Cornell as my top choices. Other schools I'm applying to are Harvard, Brown, and BU. (Kind of a weird list I know, but given the opportunity I would love to move to Boston or the surrounding area for personal reasons).

    What might be some good safetys to add to this list? Should I play it really safe and apply to schools as little known for CS as Tufts? Or is applying to schools ranked 20-30th safe enough?

    Also, how do the schools on my list look for someone interested in going to school with the goals of:

    1. Learning a lot of really interesting and cool stuff. Because I love learning CS.

    2. Gaining skills that would make me a better software engineer/architect, and learning things about technology that would be useful to know for someone in industry.

    3. Making contacts with smart classmates and professors with the goal of finding people I would want to co-found a start-up with, or people who have founded a start-up and need a CTO type person.

    Those were listed in no particular order.

    Thanks

  2. From the Stanford webpage:

    The MS program is excellent preparation for a career as a computer professional, or for future entry into a Ph.D. program at Stanford or elsewhere. Individual programs can be structured to consist entirely of coursework or to involve some research.

    So it seems that at Stanford they accept and can accommodate the needs of both applicants interested in research and applicants more professionally focused. My questions are: Is this the case at other top schools? Are there any schools that excel at terminal masters, but not so much at research based masters or vice versa? And though schools like Stanford claim their program would work for none-research oriented students, is a lack of desire to do research a negative? Is it interpreted as a lack of interested in the field?

  3. I'm interested in going to a top US Masters program, but I have very little interest in research.

    I created a profile evaluation topic and was encouraged to aim for Princeton, Stanford, CMU, and UIUC, with safety's as well.

    What I'm looking to gain from grad school other than education is experience and exposure to industry, particularly start ups. I'm not very interested in doing research. Do top tier schools expect their applicants to do some amount of research, or express desire to do research? Does the fact that I don't want to do research hurt me or change the list of top schools for me?

  4. I agree with Adamah and blankslate.

    snit, you've got a great profile, and you should definitely be applying. In my opinion (and in Matthew Might's), if you haven't published, you need to prove that you have the interest, experience and potential of doing research. A published paper demonstrates all of that, so it's useful, but it isn't necessary. If you can demonstrate interest, experience and potential effectively through some other things you've accomplished, you're good to go.

    In order to do this, you should have specific goals in mind about what you want to pursue through a master's. You should choose a specialization, a research area or a topic that you have had experience with (through a project or through your work), have shown interest in it (maybe by doing something independently) and hence have tangible potential for.

    Look back at all the work you've done (projects, research work, your current work) and try to find a common interest or a theme in it. Try to find some progression and some direction in your choices. Then look through university and professor webpages to see what work is being done by them, and see if your interest or your experience matches with it or if you could contribute to that work because you've had some experience related to it. The best match would be something that you have had experience with and is a step forward in your direction. At this stage, it's good to get in contact with Professors and check if they are interested in you.

    If you're able to convince professors (through your Statement of Purpose) that you can contribute to research or the work being done at that university, you will have a better chance of getting admitted.

    The thing is I'm not interested in doing research. I'm looking for a terminal degree, and after/during my degree I want to get involved in a startup. Is not being interested in research a negative? Should I get interested in research to improve my changes?

    I thought/hoped that for a masters there were schools that were happy to accept non-research oriented students.

  5. I didn't think MIT had a terminal MS degree in CS. Can you provide a link?

    Also, @blankslate is right on.

    Its not terminal. It is actually the same application as the PhD. Which probably makes it about 100 times harder to get in.

    You have a strong profile IMO. It comes down to your SOP and what your work experience is. I wouldn't worry about lack of research experience (I had none when I applied for masters programs). Show passion.

    I would shoot for Princeton/Stanford/CMU. Apply to safeties of course.

    Good luck.

    What about work experience is attractive to masters programs? Is it the same things that are attractive to potential employers?

  6. I believe MIT's masters of engineering for CS is only for undergrads, but MIT's masters of science for CS is for anyone. Though it is on the path to the PhD, so I would probably need research experience.

    I think the same is also true of Berkeley.

  7. I want to get a masters in CS at a top ten school.

    I graduated from a top 30, but not top 20 university according to US News with a double major in math and cs.

    Overall GPA: 3.85

    Math GPA: 4.0

    CS GPA: 3.97

    GRE: 800 Quant, 680 Verbal, 4.5 Writing

    I believe I can get two really good recommendations and one pretty good one, all from professors at my undergrad university.

    In the two years since I graduated, I've been working as a software engineer at a startup in the Chicago area.

    I think the main weakness in my application might be lack of research. I have done no CS research at all, and one summer of math research (graph theory), but no papers published.

    I know some masters are more research oriented (MIT's) than others (Stanford's). How would my lack of relevant research affect my application. Would non research oriented masters programs care about research? Would they care about my work experience/resume?

    I feel that my GPA, GRE, and recommendations are as good as I can hope for, but I'm not sure what else I would need.

    Thanks for any input.

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