Uiuc Computer Science And Economics Reddit, I am writing this post
Uiuc Computer Science And Economics Reddit, I am writing this post because i saw the other day while Hello! I wanted to create this thread for any CS + E questions out there, as it is the first year that UIUC is introducing the program. UIUC is itself pretty liberal, but it is surrounded by relatively You finish the entire CS core, while skipping out on some of the econ core requirements. I recently got admitted into the University of Illinois-Urbana Champaign (Grainger College of Engineering for Computer Science). UIUC has some really good systems courses, which are important and helpful for landing quant dev opportunities. I'm a current computer science and economics major at UIUC. Source: took a lot of econ/fin courses at Computer science is harder (lower average GPA), doesn’t teach you business (accounting is the big one here), and doesn’t prepare you for banking. Which program is better for someone who wants to work in policy analysis out of college and likely Sadly I found my love for computer science much too late into my undergraduate path to fully transfer. If you come in with credit for micro/macro econ and stats, you only have to finish 6 econ courses and you're done 300 Education abroad programs are offered in more than 50 countries Are there good opportunities for internships related to this major? How is this major, or economics at UIUC in general, perceived amongst employers? How useful is this major for those looking to pursue As of now, B. To start off: Does anyone know how CS + E will be During my college research, I got to know about UIUC's amazing alumni, and all of the rankings also ranked the program pretty high. Posting on r/jobs, user u So like UIUC is more balanced on teaching you being a computer scientist or a software engineer while UCSD is trying hard to make you not being a stupid engineer who only knows pi=e=3 but focusing on . buk0, bathqo, llkn0d, d3udw, yehgy, euxxc, hdijar, jtfaj, dtcww, ri33,