<p>I applied to both schools EA and got into both with scholarships so money isn't the problem. I'm more concerned about which school is more suited towards comp sci and less on crap classes. I hear a lot about them for their engineering program but I dont hear a lot about comp sci even though its in dep of engineering. Drexel is a little farther from me than Case and have trimesters instead of semesters but thats my only complaint so far. I'd love to hear from cs students from either school</p>
<p>I assume “crap classes” mean non-technical courses. In any case, check out their recommended class schedule and curriculum requirements.</p>
<p>Case (BS and BA):
<a href=“Bachelor's Degree Programs | Case School of Engineering | Case Western Reserve University”>Bachelor's Degree Programs | Case School of Engineering | Case Western Reserve University;
<a href=“Bachelor's Degree Programs | Case School of Engineering | Case Western Reserve University”>Bachelor's Degree Programs | Case School of Engineering | Case Western Reserve University;
<p>Drexel (BS and BA):
<a href=“http://www.drexel.edu/~/media/Files/cs/undergrad/BSCS%20TermbyTerm71913.ashx”>http://www.drexel.edu/~/media/Files/cs/undergrad/BSCS%20TermbyTerm71913.ashx</a>
<a href=“http://www.drexel.edu/~/media/Files/cs/undergrad/BACS_TermByTerm.ashx”>http://www.drexel.edu/~/media/Files/cs/undergrad/BACS_TermByTerm.ashx</a></p>
<p>It’s a lot of jargon and stuff, but basically, for Drexel, a BS requires three read/write courses, one social science course, one business, one communications course, and six general education courses, while a BA requires requires three read/write, four social science courses, two foreign language courses, two humanities courses, two business statistics courses, two international studies courses, two communications courses, and two Women’s/African American courses.</p>
<p>For Case, both a BS and BA require three seminars, three humanities/social science courses, and one communications course…</p>
<p>the sample schedules help to break it down, thanks for the breakdown</p>