Civil engineering Vs Computer Engineering Vs Computer Science?




MarkJoel


I am graduating High School and next year i am going to be college so i am planning what course should i take. Can you please give a brief description, what they do on work, earnings and Level of difficulty of the course. Thanks i am planning early so next year ill be more sure on what course should i take thanks a lot!


Answer
comp engineers will design the digital electronics in modern devices. They work with components such as microcontrollers and FPGAs. a COMPUTER engineer will work with either hardware, software, or firmware. hardware is the design of the main components. firmware is the design of hardware and/or software that allows the devices to work correctly. software is using the physical devices.
at school as a computer engineer, i designed microprocessor systems comprised of a microprocessor (obviously), chips to interface allow interface with the user, ram, and ADCs (analog to digital converters). my senior project was the design of a UAV. you will learn programming languages such as assembly, c++, and vhdl (vhdl is a HDL not a typical programing language)

As a comp sci major you will deal with programming(software). you will learn languages such as C++, assembly, and java. you will learn a lot more about programming that comp engineering, however you will be limited to software. that being said, there will be more doors in software open.

I cant tell you much about civil
when receiving advice from anyone, family, friends or strangers, please remember that everyone is biased.

please send me an email if you want more information. i can provide you with typical courses for Comp eng as well as other info

Laurus College's Computer Networking program vs. Associates degree in Networking at a community college?




Cyndi


Laurus College's Computer Networking program vs. Associates degree in Networking at a community college. I'm trying to decide on which school to go to. I should have a lot of my units (the general education stuff) towards the Associates degree done so time of completion should be about the same but I want to know which would land me the best career.


Answer
Both are very bad choices for a career in IT. Associates degrees are not recognized by IT employers as meeting the minimum education/degree requirements to be hired. The minimum is a bachelors degree in IT, MIS, Computer Science, Software Engineering, or related major from a regionally accredited college or university, preferably with ABET accreditation, or equivalent experience to prove your skills for the technologies the employer requires. Laurus College is a private, for-profit college that is not regionally accredited nor ABET accredited. A degree from Laurus isn't worth the paper it's printed on. Any classes you take will generally be worthless for transfer to any real college that is properly accredited. Students attending Laurus are not able to use Federal Financial Aid and CalGrants. It costs about 10 times more than a community college.

A community college is at least regionally accredited, and if you take classes that are defined to be transferable, then you can use the credit to transfer to any 4 year college or university that is also regionally accredited. However, most computer science and IT courses offered at community colleges are not transferable. So these classes will generally not reduce the classes you would need to take for the major to get a bachelors degree. That's because most 4 year college majors consist of upper-division courses, and courses from community college can only be applied to lower division classes such as for general education and major prerequisites.

So the best plan for a career in IT is to attend a community college to take ONLY classes required to transfer into an IT major at a specific 4 year college or university. That means you'll shouldn't take any IT or computer related classes before transfer because they won't help you get the degree any faster or cheaper. Then transfer to a business IT major at a good school.

Another option would be to learn the IT skills you need through intensive self-study, experimentation, and whatever IT experience you can get. You don't need a degree to work in IT if you can prove that you know your stuff down cold - and can convince the hiring manager of your competence and ability. It is better to get a bachelors degree in the long term because it makes it substantially easier to get interviews when you change employers. If you are highly skilled in IT with good references, then a degree is NOT required for many employers. I worked for 20+ years as a software engineer and systems architect, and many of the top IT professionals I worked with did not have computer science degrees or even any college degree at all. They did have a lot of motivation to learn everything they needed to know through intensive self study. In fact, many of the best IT engineers were the ones without degrees. I suspect this is because they didn't rely on being told the info they needed - they actively sought out the information on their own and mastered it. I have two bachelors degree and a masters degree in computing subjects, so I don't recommend against college at a valid path. But I know for a fact that college isn't the ONLY way to get a career in IT for self-motivated people.




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