Owego Posted September 28, 2013 Posted September 28, 2013 I studied Sociology as an undergraduate and have had a horrible time with the job market. A big problem for me is that I have borderline aspergers and very poor social skills. I have some GIS experience, and have begun to become interested in the programming side of things. I have a romanticized image of working for a tech startup or one of the big GIS companies some day as a programmer. Would this degree get me there? does it carry the same weight as a true "CS" degree or would it be a waste of time and money? This applies for Chicago's Master of computer science program geared towards non-cs majors as well.
xGeek Posted October 1, 2013 Posted October 1, 2013 Hi Owego, My 2 cents: I don't really know if the program is "prestigious" and what weight it carries with employers. However, Penn is a great university (not quite sure how strong they are in CS though) and I took a look at the course requirements for the program; they are essentially the core CS classes for an undergraduate degree in CS. In fact, I believe if you master the material you shouldn't find trouble finding a job in the software world (in my experience so far software companies really care more about if you can actually code than where you got your degree from; the most the degree can do for you is get you to the interview stage). Hope that helps.
moolriaz Posted November 28, 2013 Posted November 28, 2013 Owego, I agree with the above, but I would add the comment to choose Chicago over Penn if you had the choice. I studied at Penn in the CIS department and it wasn't a particularly big or active part of Penn (facilities were also surprisingly poor - often had to sit on the floor). There are many state and private universities with more active/well known CS departments than Penn, and I'd say Chicago is one of them.
Chai_latte Posted December 3, 2013 Posted December 3, 2013 I'm a little shocked about moolriaz's experience. I always thought that Penn's comp. sci. dept. was well-regarded (more than Chicago's). I did not attend the program, but I did consider it. The general consensus is that the MCIT, like most degrees, is what you make of it. For those without a CS background, it pulls them up to speed. But, the price is quite high (particularly for a field that isn't super-stringent about degrees) and it is not as rigorous as a standard CS MS (obviously). I decided against it, but it will probably open more doors than a sociology degree does.
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now