Which is better college course? BS Information Technology or BS Computer Science? Why?

June 7th, 2011 by admin | Posted under Answers and Questions.
college information technology courses
by Daneel Ariantho

Question by 16: Which is better college course? BS Information Technology or BS Notebook Science? Why?
please compare them.. it’s quite confusing.. i need to know which is right for me.. thank you.. =)

Best answer:

Answer by boost.the.peace.
I would say BS Notebook Science. You will get skills you need on the Notebook and still learn in this area Technology

What do you reckon? Answer below!

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Comments

2 Responses to “Which is better college course? BS Information Technology or BS Computer Science? Why?”
  1. Jacob says:

    BS CS is much better than BS IT. One thing that I’ve noticed is that everyone who has a degree in CS can do everything someone in IT can do, but very few people with a degree in IT can do what someone in CS can do.

    But, CS is usually quite a bit harder than IT. A lot of the time, someone working in CS will be required to handle hard processes using mathematical techniques - while also making sure that it’s the most efficient yet most accurate way, while an IT person would only be handling how to avoid a bug in the system.

    Ultimately the difference between CS and IT is lots of math.

  2. Matthew says:

    It depends on what you want to do with your degree.

    Notebook Science is going to be more notebook programing, software development, logic, algorithms, and learning in this area how computers work at their lowest levels (very technical details). A excellent majority of Notebook Science graduates have jobs as notebook programmers (or something in the programming field like a consultant).

    Information Technology is typically more in this area networking, notebook integration, notebook repair, and maintenance. You may study some programming but not as much as in a typical notebook science program. A typical job would be a network administrator or notebook support person.

    Of course, this is just in general. You might want to try out with specific schools and see what kind of curriculum their programs follow. There is a pretty huge range of jobs you can get with each. Hope this helps.

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