Kate Spade 25% OFF today&tomorrow# Fashion - 美丽时尚
C*y
1 楼
全部学费仅6600刀,貌似不只GIT,其他大学也在大量生产CS硕博,还有大量相关专业
的暴力转行涌进CS,更还有海量的印度人在搞CS,如今CS工资很高形势很好,但今后CS
的火热还能持续多久,会最终人满为患供大于求,高薪不再吗?
As universities ponder whether and how to offer affordable, high-quality
instruction over the Internet, all eyes are on the Georgia Institute of
Technology. The school recently announced plans to offer an online master’s
degree in computer science for less than $7,000 — a fraction of what such
a degree would cost in an on-campus setting.
The master’s program will be available as a pilot effort in the fall of
2014 and then expand dramatically. To receive credit, a student would have
to be accepted by Georgia Tech, which eventually hopes to enroll 10,000
students in the online program.
The school explains on its website that the only difference between its MS
and OMS is the course structure and the speed at which students choose to
finish the classes.
A residential student recently approached Mr. Zvi Galil, the dean of its
College of Computing, and complained that the online program would devalue
his degree if it grows too large because so many more people would have it.
Mr. Galil said he told the student: "You're not here because you're good,
you're here because you're lucky. When we admitted you, we turned away 500
other students who were as good as you or maybe better."
http://www.bostonglobe.com/opinion/editorials/2013/08/29/georgi
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/05/16/georgia-tech-masters-d
http://www.omscs.gatech.edu/faq/
的暴力转行涌进CS,更还有海量的印度人在搞CS,如今CS工资很高形势很好,但今后CS
的火热还能持续多久,会最终人满为患供大于求,高薪不再吗?
As universities ponder whether and how to offer affordable, high-quality
instruction over the Internet, all eyes are on the Georgia Institute of
Technology. The school recently announced plans to offer an online master’s
degree in computer science for less than $7,000 — a fraction of what such
a degree would cost in an on-campus setting.
The master’s program will be available as a pilot effort in the fall of
2014 and then expand dramatically. To receive credit, a student would have
to be accepted by Georgia Tech, which eventually hopes to enroll 10,000
students in the online program.
The school explains on its website that the only difference between its MS
and OMS is the course structure and the speed at which students choose to
finish the classes.
A residential student recently approached Mr. Zvi Galil, the dean of its
College of Computing, and complained that the online program would devalue
his degree if it grows too large because so many more people would have it.
Mr. Galil said he told the student: "You're not here because you're good,
you're here because you're lucky. When we admitted you, we turned away 500
other students who were as good as you or maybe better."
http://www.bostonglobe.com/opinion/editorials/2013/08/29/georgi
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/05/16/georgia-tech-masters-d
http://www.omscs.gatech.edu/faq/