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Navigate the Booming Computer Science Market

High paying jobs are available, but getting into a top program is becoming increasingly difficult.

By Brian Burnsed

Posted: August 8, 2011

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Nick Black garnered a master's in computer science from the Georgia Institute of Technology in 2010 and quickly received six-figure offers for leadership roles at several technology firms. Now at NVIDIA, a tech firm that develops components used in computers and mobile devices, he maintains that his position as a senior compiler engineer is exactly the type of job he expected out of grad school and that the interview process wasn't overly complicated. 

Landing a job in today's struggling economy was relatively simple for Black, in part because he received a master's degree from a top computer science school, but computer science students with either bachelor's or master's degrees are in demand now and are expected to be for the next decade. According to a U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics report, there will be an estimated 1.8 million new IT jobs by 2018, a 22 percent jump from today's market.

The industry was dealt a blow after the dot-com bubble burst in 2000 following a decade of rampant speculation among investors, but the rise of cloud computing, mobile devices, and applications is fueling more demand in the sector, academic officials and hiring consultants say. 

[Learn more about the IT job market.] 

"The job market is booming," says Gopal Gupta, head of computer science at the University of Texas—Dallas, where 80 percent of 2011 computer science students already had jobs lined up before they received their diplomas. "With an increase in automation everywhere, the popularity of online social media, the increase in mobile devices, and countries where computing jobs are traditionally off-shored—particularly India—saturating their labor supply, the job prospects for young computing professionals, especially new graduates, are excellent." 

[See how social media helps and hinders job searches.] 

For prospective computer science students, the downside to this employment surge is the resulting increase in applicants, which will likely create tougher admissions standards at programs nationwide. George Mason University's undergraduate computer science population has leaped by 39 percent from 344 students to 479. At Trinity University, officials are bracing for a potential influx of computer science students, and have already added an extra session of the introductory class.

"If there is a huge surge of students, we may have to consider making our major and the introductory classes more competitive—maybe like premed has always been," says Paul Myers, professor of computer science at Trinity. 

Similarly, at the University of Illinois, officials note that average ACT scores of admitted computer science students have jumped over the past two years. To navigate the increasingly competitive computer science admissions process, it's integral that students focus on honing their mathematical acumen by taking advanced classes such as AP Calculus, says Daniel Gallagher, dean of admissions at the Stevens Institute of Technology.

Robert Beck, chairman of Villanova University's department of computing sciences, notes that taking part in tech-centric extracurriculars could help your chances as well. "Even if there aren't computing courses in the high school—and in many places there are not—students can look for a computing club; a robotics competition; a Web design project to give themselves a little practice," he says. 

Clarified on 08/09/2011: An earlier version of this story referred to Georgia Tech’s placement in the U.S. News engineering rankings.

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