T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1439.1 | pointer to another source | SMAUG::ABBASI | | Fri May 03 1991 11:05 | 1 |
| you might also want to try to post this in REFINE::COLLEGE notes file.
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1439.2 | | HPSTEK::XIA | In my beginning is my end. | Fri May 03 1991 12:39 | 6 |
| To me the choice is obvious. Go with the U.Mass. Although you want to
keep your options open and apply for both. If your goal is to get into
grad. school, it is crucial that you choose U.Mass. over Fitchburg
State.
Eugene
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1439.3 | exit | WONDER::COYLE | | Mon May 06 1991 10:32 | 16 |
| I am am currently working on a BS in Applied Math. When I decided that
my occaisional coures shoul lead to some sort of degree, I looked
arround. I specifically looked at Fitchburg State, because I live in
Leominster, and was not that impressed.
I was mainly looking at part time continuing education types of
programs and was flexible when considering majors (EE, CS, and Math).
I did not look long at Fitchburg, but those I talked to all suggested
if I wanted to go on beyond the BS, I should hunt for a better
program. I did, and am now at U Lowell dispite the fact that it
requires a lot more driving.
I would suggest U Mass for you, but serriouslly suggest you talk
to possible grad schools about it now rather than later.
-Joe
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1439.4 | | HPSTEK::XIA | In my beginning is my end. | Tue May 07 1991 01:53 | 17 |
| Now I am getting curious as to the rankings of math dept. in U.S.
I will venture a guess that the top ten list contains the following:
Harvard
Princeton
MIT
Berkeley
Standford
Chicago
Yale
Cal Tech
Columbia
Brown
Anyone need the ratings of the top 50?
Eugene
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1439.5 | rating of math depts | SMAUG::ABBASI | | Tue May 07 1991 10:58 | 6 |
| Yes Eugene, That list would be interesting to see.
it looks like the first 3 you listed up on the list are also the
3 most expensive schools in the country .
does then mean it is true, you get what you pay for?
thanks,
/naser
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1439.6 | | CHOVAX::YOUNG | Still billing, after all these years. | Tue May 07 1991 11:02 | 21 |
| When I was in college (~10 years ago) and considering applying to
graduate schools, I reviewed several of the rankings of Mathematics
dept.s in the U.S.
The University of Chicago was the highest rated in all of the lists and
had been for some time. The rankigs (as I can vaguely recall them) were
something like:
Chicago
Berkely \ These two might be reversed
MIT /
Cal Tech.
Stanford
...
The ratings of undergraduate depts was nearly the same. The only real
'suprises' to me were, in the grad. depts, the U.of Wisconsin, and in
Undergrad.'s the U.of Waterloo. As I recall, Northeastern also had
very good undergrad. ratings.
-- Barry
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1439.7 | | HPSTEK::XIA | In my beginning is my end. | Tue May 07 1991 12:46 | 20 |
| re .5,
Uh Naser, ya don't really pay for grad. school. Most of the time, if
you are top of the cream, they give you a tuition wave and an
assistantship or a fellow ship.
re .6,
I think Chicago has come down quite a bit. I didn't list the top ten
in the right order. I think strictly speaking the top fives are:
Berkeley
Princeton
MIT
Harvard
Stanford
Again, anyone know the top 50 list in the right order?
Eugene
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1439.8 | second hand UMass info | TOOK::CBRADLEY | Chuck Bradley | Tue May 07 1991 16:02 | 20 |
| here is some second hand info.
my daughter is finishing her second year at U.Mass.
she is not a math major but has had 5 math courses there, calc 2, calc 3,
linear algebra (235 i think), & probability/statistics for math/science/eng,
(51x,51y i think). this is what i think she experienced.
all were taught by full time profs, not assistants.
the prob/stat is by a visiting prof, apparently a big name in the field.
class size of 20-40 for all. all of them covered everything in the syllabus.
of the 4 teachers, two sounded very good at teaching, 1 pretty good,
and one not good. i think she felt the math majors got more attention from him.
3 of 4 were very willing to help during office hours.
the linear algebra course covered far more than when i took it during the
mid 60s at IIT. most of the a&b students in the prob/stat course spend
over 15 hours/week on the problem sets, including the grad students.
her math friends say the abstract algebra/foundations courses are hard.
i have no info on graduate admissions. call them. everyone she has
talked to has been very helpful, much more like a small college than a
huge, impersonal, state bureaucracy.
incidently, every one of her profs taught during the recent involuntary,
unpaid, 2 day furlough.
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1439.9 | southbound on U.S. 202 ! | DSM::SLAUENWHITE | | Mon Jun 10 1991 06:04 | 6 |
| Thanks for your thoughts, everyone.
UMass/Amherst it is. Just have to wrap things up at the office,
do some intense reviewing this summer, and it's back to school in
September. Looking forward to it!
- Dave
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