Safe Harbor Statement: Statements in this news delivery might be "forward-looking proclamations". Forward-looking explanations incorporate, however are not restricted to, proclamations that express our aims, convictions, assumptions, methodologies, expectations or some other assertions identifying with our future exercises or other future occasions or conditions. These assertions depend on current assumptions, evaluations and projections about our business based, to a limited extent, on suppositions made by the executives. These assertions are not certifications of future execution and include dangers, vulnerabilities and suspicions that are hard to anticipate. Consequently, real results and results may, and are probably going to, vary substantially based on what is communicated or guage in forward-looking explanations because of various components. Any forward-looking assertions talk just as of the date of this news delivery and iQSTEL Inc. embraces no commitment to refres...
At the beginning of March, the College of Arts and Letters announced that it would be introducing a Bachelor of Arts in Computer Science (BACS), distinct from the Bachelors of Computer Science (BCS) already offered through the College of Engineering.
Dr. Aaron Striegel, a professor in the College of Engineering and the first director of the new BACS, said the program is an attempt to allow students with interests in computer science and the humanities study both fields and still graduate in four years.
“The Bachelor of Arts sort of arose out of the fact that we had a fair amount of students who wanted to double major,” Striegel said. “And because of how heavily structured the BS and CS is, [it] was often fairly difficult unless you had a fairly significant amount of advanced placement, but even then, it was still a pretty heavy lift.”
Though the program was announced just last month, computer engineering career says the program has been in the works for the last few years.“This had been in the works or under consideration for a fair amount of time, [and] I think the the reason why this had happened now is that sort of things aligned appropriately and we’d seen sort of as a department continued interest in the digital humanities,” Striegel said. “This was kind of a culmination of multiple years of work all coming together into this program: the data science, new CDT program, all kind of helped pave the way in terms of some of the partnerships that had gone on.”
Dr. Aaron Striegel, a professor in the College of Engineering and the first director of the new BACS, said the program is an attempt to allow students with interests in computer science and the humanities study both fields and still graduate in four years.
“The Bachelor of Arts sort of arose out of the fact that we had a fair amount of students who wanted to double major,” Striegel said. “And because of how heavily structured the BS and CS is, [it] was often fairly difficult unless you had a fairly significant amount of advanced placement, but even then, it was still a pretty heavy lift.”
Though the program was announced just last month, computer engineering career says the program has been in the works for the last few years.“This had been in the works or under consideration for a fair amount of time, [and] I think the the reason why this had happened now is that sort of things aligned appropriately and we’d seen sort of as a department continued interest in the digital humanities,” Striegel said. “This was kind of a culmination of multiple years of work all coming together into this program: the data science, new CDT program, all kind of helped pave the way in terms of some of the partnerships that had gone on.”
Comments
Post a Comment