home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Xref: sparky comp.ai:4369 comp.ai.edu:542 sci.cognitive:734
- Newsgroups: comp.ai,comp.ai.edu,sci.cognitive
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!saimiri.primate.wisc.edu!ames!agate!linus!linus.mitre.org!boole.mitre.org!crawford
- From: crawford@boole.mitre.org (Randy Crawford)
- Subject: Re: B.S. Degree
- Message-ID: <1992Nov22.031734.945@linus.mitre.org>
- Sender: news@linus.mitre.org (News Service)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: boole.mitre.org
- Organization: The MITRE Corporation, McLean, VA
- References: <1992Nov18.033642.12612@galileo.cc.rochester.edu> <BxzCKy.JtC@acsu.buffalo.edu> <1992Nov19.232802.22588@saifr00.cfsat.honeywell.com>
- Date: Sun, 22 Nov 1992 03:17:34 GMT
- Lines: 55
-
- In article <1992Nov19.232802.22588@saifr00.cfsat.honeywell.com> shanks@saifr00.cfsat.honeywell.com (Mark Shanks) writes:
- >In article <BxzCKy.JtC@acsu.buffalo.edu> rapaport@acsu.buffalo.edu (William J. Rapaport) writes:
- >
- >>But, in any case, why do you think it matters whether your degree says
- >>"BS" or "BA"? Do you think one is "better" than the other?
- >
- >Well, the corporations think it matters. Go knock on the door at
- >GM, McDonnell Douglas, Boeing, or Honeywell (and these are the ones
- >I know of) with a BA, and you will be given the bum's rush. It's
- >a corporate "cookbook" thing. No BS - no job.
-
- At best this assertion is incomplete. At worst it's completely wrong.
-
- BS degrees in music are categorically useless when applying for employment at
- corporations (other than in sales). BA degrees in physics or computer science
- are usually valued highly.
-
- The letter after the "B" is FAR less important than the major. Belief otherwise
- is just folklore.
-
- >
- >>At MIT, I'm told, English majors get a BS in English, so I'm not
- >>sure that what the degree is called really matters.
- >
- >Only if you're looking for a job at one of the corporations. The US
- >military academies operate the same way - BS is what it says on the
- >diploma. Doesn't matter what you focused on (although you don't
- >get many electives there anyway.) That has been my experience over
- >the last 10 years.
-
- In both cases (MIT or USMA English majors) the graduates must complete courses
- in calculus and the sciences well in excess of that expected of BA recipients
- elsewhere. The determining factor in the type of bachelor's degree is not the
- major area, but the cognates. BS recipients are presumed to be grounded in
- more general science coursework than BAs, and vice-versa for the humanities.
-
- A case might be made for corporations preferring BS degrees in english over
- BAs. But why hire a BS in english when the alternative might be a BA in
- physics or computer science? I just can't see the BS would realistically
- be preferred over the BA, unless all else were equal.
-
- >
- >I recommend a BSEE, then get your BSCS or MSCS. Then you can work for anyone.
-
- True, if you're fond of hardware. But the better preparation for advanced
- work in CS is a bachelor's degree in math. And a BS in marketing with a MS
- in CS is a very good combination (or a BS in CS followed by a MBA). Just
- about _any_ technical or business degree followed by the MS in CS is a healthy
- combination. Just ask an ex-zoologist such as myself.
-
- --
-
- | Randy Crawford crawford@mitre.org The MITRE Corporation
- | 7525 Colshire Dr., MS Z421
- | N=1 -> P=NP 703 883-7940 McLean, VA 22102
-