Computer Science
Computer Science is a Bachelor's of Science program offered by the Georgia Institute of Technology. Housed in the College of Computing, one of the six major colleges that make up Georgia Tech, it is the largest major at Georgia Tech (barely beating out Mechanical Engineering).
Contrary to popular belief, Computer Science is not the study of writing code. Computer Science is a primarily academic discipline that studies the theoretical conceptualizations and practical constructions of a computational machine, the algorithms that can run on those machines, as well as their applications to computational and non-computational fields, and uses code as a medium to accomplish those tasks.
Topics and career paths that exist within this broad field include theoretical computer science (such as algorithm design and the study of computation and efficiency), computer systems, computer architecture, artificial intelligence, computer graphics, computer simulation, information transmission, human-computer interaction, and of course, software engineering.
Computer Science has subfields that are also closely related to Electrical and Computer Engineering, primarily the construction and programming of computer hardware, as well as subfields strongly correlated to math, such as machine learning and algorithm design,
Student Body
The Computer Science program boasts 3,000 undergraduates, 3,500 on-campus graduate students, and 10,000 online graduate students through the College of Computing's OMSCS (Online Masters in Computer Science).[1]
The College of Computing plays host to a wide variety of clubs that serve to aid CS undergrads and grad students during their academic careers. Highlighted clubs include those run by the Student Competition Center (SCC), including RoboJackets and HyTech Racing, both of which have a variety of positions and challenges in the software field. Other non-competitive clubs include GreyHat (cybersecurity), The Agency (artificial intelligence), and Big O (theoretical computer science). A list of all College of Computing clubs, along with meeting times, locations, and links, can be found here.
The College of Computing is also one of the home units of the Startup Exchange club and the CREATE-X organization, both organizations aimed at cultivating the start-up culture found in both the university and the city of Atlanta as a whole. Resources provided by these departments can be found here.
Finally, the College of Computing also hosts two career fairs, one in the fall and one in the spring, each of which take place roughly three weeks before the All-Majors Career Fair (the first in early September, and the second in early January).[2]
Degree Requirements
General Core [3] | |
---|---|
Course | Description |
APPH 1040/1050/1060 | Wellness (2 hours) |
ENGL 1101, 1102 | English Composition I, II (6 hours) |
CS 1301 | 3 hours |
Humanities Electives | 6 hours |
Social Sciences Electives | 12 hours |
MATH 1551, 1552, 2550 | Differential, Integral, Multivariable Calculus (8 hours) |
MATH 1554 | Linear Algebra (4 hours) |
MATH 3012 | Applied Combinatorics (3 hours) |
MATH 3215/MATH 3235/MATH 3670/ISYE 3770 | Probability and Statistics (3 hours) |
CS 4001/CS 4002/CS 4873/SLS 3110 | CS Ethics (3 hours) |
PHYS 2211 + 2 More Lab Sciences + Lab Sequence | Lab Sciences (12 hours) |
Degree Requirements | |
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Course | Description |
CS 1100 | Freshman Leap Seminar |
CS 1331 | Introduction to Object Oriented Programming (3) |
CS 1332 | Data Structures and Algorithms (3) |
CS 2050/2051 | (Honors) Introduction to Discrete Mathematics |