Yahoo Answers is shutting down on May 4th, 2021 (Eastern Time) and beginning April 20th, 2021 (Eastern Time) the Yahoo Answers website will be in read-only mode. There will be no changes to other Yahoo properties or services, or your Yahoo account. You can find more information about the Yahoo Answers shutdown and how to download your data on this help page.

What jobs does a computer science degree open up?

I'm currently doing my GCSE after I finish them want to do maths, physics and computing a levels and then get a computer science degree.

I'm interested in jobs like

Software engineer

Game programming

I'm wondering if a computer science degree would give me a chance to get these jobs and what other jobs could I get with that degree.

2 Answers

Relevance
  • 7 years ago
    Favorite Answer

    Computer Programming looks like it will remain the premier IT job area. This makes a Computer Science (CS) Bachelor’s (4 year) Degree one of the premier IT degrees to have. Although the actual courses will vary from college to college, this major will usually have a primary focus on Programming and include advanced Math classes. People in this major usually are pursuing careers developing application software, web development, embedded code and robotics. Game programming is another possible area. Sometimes depending on the college the degree may cover some more general topics as listed under CIS below. Programming is not for everyone and requires a logical mindset. Many people believe that Programmers are born and not made and that taking tons of Programming classes will not make you a Programmer if you don’t have a natural gifting for it. I basically agree with that opinion. In CS and other IT majors it is very important to keep a high Grade average 3.0-3.5 GPA as employers are known to examine college grades closely when selecting new hires of internship candidates. Maintaining this higher grade average can be difficult in CS as there are many challenging courses. Students who see their GPA slipping or who struggle with the Math and Programming classes would be better advised to transfer out of CS if they see it difficult to maintain that grade average. With 50-100 applicants for each job position employers often will have many graduates with a 4.0 average GPA to choose from. If you graduate with a 2.4 or 2.8 GPA it will probably impact the types and size of companies where you can find employment. The aerospace company where I work has a 3.0-3.5 minimum GPA requirement. It used to be 3.5 and they recently lowered the bar to 3.0.

    Many CS students find themselves not enjoying programming, not being gifted at it or not having the math and logic skills to be good at programming and they will switch out into CIS or other equivalent more general IT degree programs. CS majors that are able to graduate can also qualify for jobs listed below under CIS – jobs like Computer Security, Networking or Systems/Database Administration.

    Over the years I have met many Computer Science majors and Programmers and have found that you can see some basic common characteristics. Below is a list of personal characteristics of successful software developers that were compiled by a group of three very gifted software development co-workers:

    Musical talent

    Detail oriented

    Thinks in terms of modules steps or sequencing

    Math is important – but even more logic

    A talent in building physical things like (As a kid maybe Legos)

    You might have a messy desk but you can easily find things on it

    Creative

    Not highly sociable (small group of friends)

    Not highly interactive in group discussions

    Obsessive Compulsive

    Bulldog tenacity in completing what they begin

    Loses all sense of time while completing tasks

    Has intense focus on hobbies and/or games

    Passionate about the work they produce

    Another different IT related degree choice is Computer Information Systems (CIS) which involves less Math and Programming. This may also be called a variety of other names like Information Technology (IT), Information Systems (IS), Computer Applications (CA), Computer Networking Design, etc. This CIS is a general technical degree and is the degree that I have. Holders of these degrees work in a variety of technical jobs like these:

    Computer Technician, Service Center Coordinator, Help Desk Staff, Storage Administrator, Network Administrator, Systems Administrator, Systems Engineer, Enterprise Administrator, Active Directory Administrator, Exchange and Messaging Administrator, Backup Administrator, Disaster Recovery Specialist, Database Administrator, Computing Security Specialist, Ethical Hacker, Corporate IT Acquisition Specialist and Data Center Administrator, just to name a few.

    In a small business the list above might be one or two people doing all these jobs. In a large Enterprise environment this could be hundreds of people.

    So without dwelling on the GPA discussion too much - In spite of the overall “on paper” superiority of a CS major, if you have a CS degree with a 2.4 GPA that you struggled through you might find it infinitely more difficult to find a job than if you were a CIS major with a 3.4 GPA.

    Best wishes!

    Source(s): 16 years IT systems engineer in Fortune 50 company, Bachelors degree in CIS, Bachelors degree in Advertising, 21 Microsoft certifications, MCSE and MCT, A+ Security+ Server+ Cloud+ CompTIA certifications, IT Published magazine author of 200+ magazine articles, IT book and magazine technical editor
  • 7 years ago

    BEWARE!

    I did computing at higher (Scottish a-level) and when we did programming, I thought I would enjoy it. But at the end of the 5 weeks, everyone in our class was bored out of their mind as it took us so long to make our coursework program and the practice one. Don't think a job in computing is all fun and games - it aint...

    Source(s): A in higher computing
Still have questions? Get your answers by asking now.