NemosX Posted March 20, 2017 Posted March 20, 2017 I am seeking a masters in computer science, and I would love and appreciate any help with identifying schools and programs that I should consider based on my profile. I am interested in machine learning and computer vision. Here's my story: I am a former United States Marine that served as a Tactical Data Network Specialist in Okinawa, Japan for three years. As a network specialist, I configured routers, switches, and servers. After the Corps, I pursued my undergrad in computer science - 4.0 in major / 3.97 overall. In undergrad, I worked on a research project that was a collaboration between our computer science and meteorology departments and presented at the 91st annual meeting of the American Meteorological Society in Seattle. After my undergrad, I was hired as a entry level developer at a large financial institution. In 5 years, I was promoted from entry level to intermediate developer, senior developer, technical lead senior, and finally enterprise architect. Beyond technical acumen and academia, I have formal leadership experience as a Sergeant in the Marine Corps and the tech lead role. I took the GRE in June and scored a 161Q, 165V, and 3.5 AWA. I am naturally disappointed by the Quant & AWA scores, but I am hoping that a strong statement combined with solid letters of recommendation will keep me in the running. I am currently in Pennsylvania, but I am willing to relocate within the states. Thanks in advance for any help and insight. As an aside, one program that particularly interested me was an Intelligent Robotics program at USC: http://catalogue.usc.edu/preview_program.php?catoid=6&poid=5609&returnto=1460 Everything I read seems to suggest that all of these programs are hyper-competitive - it's a little more than discouraging.
poopyhead Posted March 20, 2017 Posted March 20, 2017 What are your research interests? I'm guessing robotics and AI are one of them?
NemosX Posted March 20, 2017 Author Posted March 20, 2017 That's correct. Also, for what it is worth, I was exposed to statistics in my career for a DMAIC green belt. It may not count for anything, but I had a fun working with minitab.
poopyhead Posted March 21, 2017 Posted March 21, 2017 If you're interested in statistics, have you thought about machine learning (or deep learning) or big data management/analysis?
NemosX Posted March 21, 2017 Author Posted March 21, 2017 (edited) I haven't considered big data management/analysis - I'll read up on it. I have looked into several machine learning programs, but I am struggling to find solid schools where I have a high probability of gaining admission. Again, my fear is that because my quant score is a 161 instead of a 164, I will be systematically filtered out. While I understand that many schools evaluate applicants holistically, I am perhaps a little incredulous. I realize I have no basis for this suspicion as I have never applied to grad school before. More than anything, I am just trying to determine, based on my profile, a mixture of schools so that I can formulate a comprehensive application strategy. For example, 2 schools that are reach and within the realm of possibility, 2-3 schools where probability of acceptance > some relatively safe %, 2 schools where probability of acceptance approaches 100%. Is that even a good approach? When evaluating the programs, how much emphasis should I apply to the reported average gre scores? Edited March 21, 2017 by NemosX
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