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Malformed University Name, Uncategorized Surveys

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My college experience was not necessarily unique toComputer Science
My college experience was not necessarily unique to SFA, but helped me learn what was necessary to succeed and complete challenging tasks.

I also learned that what I enjoyed studying in college (computer science) might not translate to what I enjoyed doing as a career. That is why I made a career change after 8 years and went to law school.

Alumnus Male -- Class 2000
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Carnegie Mellon is a school that accepts aComputer Science
Carnegie Mellon is a school that accepts a lot of students initially, and then kicks a lot of them out. They believe in hard work and yelling at you, over and over, "Produce! Produce! Produce, you lazy bastards!" This has the advantage of yielding a small number of very efficient, very bright graduates, and has the additional advantage that it works well for many different departments -- I think CMU Drama, Art, Architecture, Engineering and Computer Science grads will all back me up on them using this approach, and the quality of the alumni in each of those departments is telling. I'm dual-degree Math and Comp Sci, myself. The other good thing about this approach is the attitude that it creates within each of the colleges -- we all feel we're oppressed by the school, and so there's a lot of in-college solidarity.

While students of individual colleges can be inbred and clannish, rarely talking to people outside their own major, you can cross those boundaries with a little effort. For instance, if you're a CS major I highly recommend talking to art students, both for their attitude and for that major's male/female ratio. Besides, they're as overworked and obsessed as you are, which helps relationship dynamics. And it's not that students of other colleges don't *want* to talk to people outside their major, they just rarely do it without prompting.

CMU graduates tend to get together again easily, and you'll find a lot of them in high-tech areas such as Austin or the San Francisco Bay Area. It's surprising how much of a support system you can find on short notice in areas that attract CMU grads, since they all know you've been through the same thing they have, and they respect you for it. And since they often clump together, finding a couple of them can find you a whole nest.

Would I recommend that you, the reader, go to CMU? Well, maybe. The most important thing is to already know what you want to be. You'll find that the required focus and intensity is, well, intense. It's hard to do something you're not sure you like, and it's harder to do it to CMU's minimum standards. Make sure that whatever you're doing, you really want to do it. If you don't know, then CMU is very likely the wrong school. And if you do, and you're willing to gamble on burning out, breaking down early and winding up out on your ass... Hey, we need more people that work hour after hour while grinning madly at adversity. Get yourself an application form already and start practicing your all-night work sessions. You'll need it.

Alumnus Male -- Class 2000
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Don't let the "Saint" part fool you.Computer Science
Don't let the "Saint" part fool you. They are not Catholic or even sort-of-Catholic. They don't have a chapel but an "Inter-Faith Sanctuary" and the only holy book you can't find in there is a Bible. The prominant art exhibit at the time that I went for the campus tour was several poster size prints of a naked woman in various sorts of bondage with bruises on her body and such. On closer inspection I realized that the girl in the pictures was our tour guide. So I decided aginst an art major and went for computers instead. The computer program (Computer Information Systems) was not terribly robust. I am in web design now - which I taught myself. My husband, who also went to Saint Rose, is in Sysytems Administration - which he taught himself. We just went there to get the silly piece of paper which says BS on it. I did well enough, and the faculty was very nice. Much more attention was paid to the education or communication disorders departments than the other programs. They position themselves as a commuter friendly school and in the beginning they were. But that was changing as I left. Their liberal arts requirements were being made much more rigid. I was invited to participate in a focus group regarding the new requirements. I tried to explain how commuters would find it difficult to fulfill some of the new reqirements being proposed since, for example, natural sciences courses were only offered at certain times, but the dean (of what?) made it perfectly clear that she wasn't listening. My guess is that on campus students spend more money. I also added that requiring all students to take an intro to computer course would make it more difficult for computer majors to use the labs for projects and would be a royal waste of time for most people who already knew what a mouse was for. Nobody seemed to care about that either. Some of the physical education requirements are a bit silly. Not the classes or the two credits themselves, but this silly packet we had to complete as part of total wellness education. I did some of it and protested the rest. I spoke to the head of the department and told her what I did and didn't do and I don't think it affected my grade. I pretty much went to class and went home so I know nothing about campus life. There's a bit of a parking problem. Technically since they're in the city of Albany, there's parking anywhere, but finding something within two blocks is a bit of a challenge.
Alumnus Male -- Class 2000
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