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Ask HN: Is a generic or specialist degree title more valuable?

2 pointsby hashimover 2 years ago
I&#x27;m a UK-based web dev finally going to university in order to round out my knowledge with a degree in CompSci, trying to decide between London and Birmingham. During my extensive research I&#x27;ve noticed that many universities seem to repackage what&#x27;s essentially the same course - identical or mostly identical lists of modules - under different degree titles. For example, a few of the University of Birmingham&#x27;s Computer Science courses are named as follows:<p>- Computer Science BSc - Artificial Intelligence and Computer Science BSc - Computer Science&#x2F;Software Engineering MEng<p>But comparing each degree on the UoB website shows the list of modules is identical apart from one extra module that is removed or added depending on the &quot;specialism&quot;.<p>In the case of these courses by London&#x27;s University of Greenwich:<p>- Computer Science BSc - Computer Science (Artificial Intelligence) - Computer Science (Cyber Security) BSc - Computer Science (Data Science) BSc<p>...the available modules are completely identical, with one or two becoming compulsory or optional based on the &quot;specialism&quot;.<p>In these cases, where I essentially have the choice to study all of the same modules and there is no difference in content between the courses, how would I choose between them? Would a generic or specialist degree title (Computer Science vs Computer Science (Artificial Intelligence)) look more impressive?<p>In other words, does the specialism help, by making the degree look broader, or are future employers&#x2F;freelance clients likely to understand the breadth of a standalone Computer Science degree, and could the specialism make the degree look too narrow?

1 comment

muzaniover 2 years ago
In my experience, neither really matters. Just don&#x27;t do something weird like Agricultural Engineering then apply for a Front End job.<p>One of our best and smartest engineers doesn&#x27;t have a degree. Many did Telecommunications (which was &quot;tech&quot; 10 years ago, before switching to the higher paid software industry). And plenty have just a regular CS or EE degree.<p>There&#x27;s a lot of variability in in interviewers. Some like the specialization, some like generalists. I would say just go with whatever sounds coolest to you.