Originally posted by: Rickten
news flash if you get straight A's or >3.5 gpa at any UC with recommendations from your profs you will have no problem getting into a good grad school. People put too much emphasis on rankings.
Originally posted by: Brackis
Easy there Webster, it was was 4:37 am when I typed that. There was a good deal of implied sarcasm that was indicated from "elitist" and on.
But honestly, I justed wanted to know what I missed out on, if anything, out in the land of sun and fun. At times I thought it to be an ideal local, but what turned me off was the combination of high GPA and low SAT scores, from which I got the feeling that it was filled with overachievers and/or the california public school system is too easy.
Originally posted by: 91TTZ
Originally posted by: Brackis
Easy there Webster, it was was 4:37 am when I typed that. There was a good deal of implied sarcasm that was indicated from "elitist" and on.
But honestly, I justed wanted to know what I missed out on, if anything, out in the land of sun and fun. At times I thought it to be an ideal local, but what turned me off was the combination of high GPA and low SAT scores, from which I got the feeling that it was filled with overachievers and/or the california public school system is too easy.
lol, don't worry about it, I was just fooling around.
Originally posted by: bolido2000
Originally posted by: HenHowC
you're biased epsiIon! haha jk i'm going off my own archaic rankings based off of when i applied to college in 1998.
it does honestly depend on your field of study. if I were able to chose again I might have gone somewhere else than ucla. i second the previous poster who stated that EE and CS departments at UCLA aren't that great.
if you have a choice between ucla and berkeley for engineering...i'd say definitely go to berkeley...i might even say go to uci over ucla if you want to do CS. Most of the CS majors I know that graduated from UCLA can't program worth sh!t...if they can they are usually the self-taught ones who already knew how to program before they started college. The course load heavily leans toward theory that would most likely NEVER be put into use when employed as a software coder
I graduated Comp Sci and E at UCLA. I used to think the CS and EE depts are UCLA were pretty bad, but my supervisor at work swears by UCLA/Berkeley CS programs. He says the important thing is that they teach you how to think, rather than just be a code monkey. I'm not sure if I'll agree with that. It's true that I knew a lot of CS/CSE people at UCLA that graduated without knowing how to program. Me included![]()
