<p>How good is SEAS? I haven't been able to get any solid opinions on this. If anyone knows anything in particular about biomedical or chemical engineering at Columbia that would be nice too.</p>
<p>Does nobody know any general things about SEAS? Like how competitive a degree is in the job market or further education. Research, internships, anything?</p>
<p>I would like to know this too</p>
<p>I would like to know too. Is Columbia any good for Computer Science? Do graduates get jobs in traditional tech fields like Google? Also, exactly what jobs do they do in Wall Street (quant, trading, analyst, IB)?</p>
<p>Columbia is good enough for CS that you will be able to get a job at Google. My friend had two interviews for a summer internship at Google. He and another one of my friends will be interning at Amazon this summer. I also know of someone who interviewed at Microsoft.</p>
<p>Even I had a CS interview at a smaller company in the city and I am a computer engineering major.</p>
<p>I know <em>many</em> people who’ve gotten internships at great CS companies. Among my friends, there were 3 interning at google, a couple at microsoft, one at foursquare, and another at amazon. And, by the way, I’m an English major who doesn’t know very many comp sci people.</p>
<p>Do either of you guys know anything about competitiveness of non CS majors? (normal engineering degrees like civil, chemical, whatever)</p>
<p>SEAS is not your typical engineering school. It is still overwhelmingly engineering, but you are still attending Columbia, and they try as hard as they can to give you a rounded education. Moreso in the College than in the Engineering school, but still-- they do. For instance, I am majoring in Applied Physics but also minoring in Music, something completely unrelated to engineering. </p>
<p>It is no MIT in terms of hard engineering. If you want that, Columbia is not the place for you. Columbia Engineering IS the place for someone who enjoys engineering, but also enjoys other things. </p>
<p>To give a good idea of internship opportunities, I’m a freshman and I have a paid internship at Bloomberg this summer. When you go to Columbia, a lot of doors open.</p>
<p>I think the question here is: Just because SEAS is an atypical engineering school, does it mean that SEAS doesn’t provide students with adequate engineering opportunities in internships and research? I read that a third of Columbia Engineering’s graduates go to traditional engineering jobs. So I don’t think going to SEAS will cut off any job options in engineering.</p>
<p>Is SEAS in any way inferior to a typical engineering school?</p>
<p>If SEAS is atypical as you say in that they try to make you well rounded, would that be in my favor if I want to go to med school?</p>
<p>Hi, actpre. I am wondering that if a third of Columbia Engineering’s graduates go to traditional engineering jobs, where the other two third students go?</p>
<p>~1/3 go into the financial services
~1/3 go to graduate school </p>
<p>However, many students pursue masters because they can’t find jobs so the graduate school numbers are inflated. </p>
<p>Probably 20% of the graduating class hasn’t found a job but wants one. Another ~10% is actually pursuing academia.</p>