STEM Course
University of Southern California Reviews
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21 Reviews Found
There are only couple of mandatory courses that you have to finish and the rest all are electives. So there are a very wide range of courses to chose from for electives and students pick courses based on their interests. Some courses like Machine Learning, Artificial Intelligence have a very high demand and hundreds of students take them and there are new courses that are introduced every semester based on new technologies in the industry. Overall I think there are lot of good courses.
Tuition fee is credit based and it changes every semester. When I studied, it was between 1950-200$ per credit and you had to finish 28 credits to get a degree in Computer Science and 32 credits if you are doing a specialization. 28*2000 = 56,000 USD You can find the current credit fee at - https://viterbigradadmission.usc.edu/programs/masters/tuition-funding/tuition-funding-masters/
The course curriculum has a lot of practical assignments which would add a lot of skills to your profile.
The total tuition fee will be around $34000.
The course curriculum is very impressive. I never knew I will appreciate studying a course in depth so much but the way the courses are structured, the assignments, the examinations, everything makes you learn the material very easily and thoroughly. You will be able to retain the studied material for a much longer time because you are forced to understand the topics instead of a rote mode of learning.
The total tuition fee is approximately $66,000.
Most of my work falls aligns with PhD students, which allows me to compete with them.
It has good courses of quantum computing where I further choose to do my PhD in. Great exposure of real time environment.
The USC Graduate School coursework is the best academic curriculum I have ever studied. The material is most relevant, intriguing, thought interacting, and requires an in depth amount of research where students are encouraged to learn about the topics at hand. Discussions are highly interactive and allow for a deep understanding of various perspectives.
Undergraduate: University of California at Berkeley (CAL). Graduate School: University of Southern California at Los Angeles (USC). I chose these institutions as they are some of the top ranked universities in the world. These are globally elite names that rank in the top tier. These college names allow for recognition in the professional environment. Major companies know the rigor that is associated with graduating from universally prestigious academic institutions such as these and the level of respect is instantaneously increased. At USC, my program ranks number one in the world in its field.
VLSI and Computer Architecture courses are state-of-the-art and well-designed. The variety of courses in the field is broad and there is a lot to learn. In each subject, you will have some really advanced topics to teach about industry-relevant innovations. Course projects are hard and you will need to spend a lot of time to excel in them but you will learn a lot from them. In some courses, professors frequently bring industry people to give guest lectures and also opens up the chance to do industrial project.
For a master's, you will need to study 28 units at USC. And one unit price is $2075. Which is likely to change by $100 a year.
They have an up-to-date curriculum that changes with new technologies and tries to stay up to date. Wide variety of courses for all interests covering most Computer Science fields ranging from software, and cloud to AI and machine learning. Courses have great assignments and projects that prepare you for working in the industry.
Around $60000 is the program fee.
The course work is up to date, at least for the coursework I have taken. Professors taught well. Some courses are research focused and more theoretical based on coding such as algorithms and design.
1 unit for $2100. A CS student requires 28 units. The total cost is $58800.
Pretty relevant. Very challenging.
75k$ per year including cost of living, books, tuition, food etc
The courses are wonderfully designed to give the students a thorough understanding of molecular biology inside the cells and the molecular techniques.
My program is fully funded.
Comments
The University of Southern California does not accept Duolingo as one of its ELP tests required for international admission. The university accepts various ELP tests such as IELTS, TOEFL, PTE, etc.