Which should i choose?

<p>I am studying in Santa Monica college(cc) now, and I plan to transfer to UC. I am going to pursue a graduate degree in finance, so computer science and math which would be a better major choice for me in undergraduate education?</p>

<p>And I have made the decision to get a master degree, UCB UCLA UCSD wich would be a better uni for me to transfer? I mean, if a higher GPA or a better uni does matter the result of the admission of application for graduate?</p>

<p>Can anyone tell me?</p>

<p>graduate degree in finance, so computer science and math which would be a better major choice for me in undergraduate education?</p>

<p>I think you should do math because more people major in computer science than math is what I would think. So, to make you stand out do math and take classes in the summer of during the year if you can handle it in computer science as well. I think it comes down to what kind of career you want after school. </p>

<p>Read more: [Best</a> UC for Finance/Business…or college for trading/investing. (computer science, degrees) - Higher education - City-Data Forum](<a href=“Best UC for Finance/Business..or college for trading/investing. (computer science, degrees) - Colleges and Universities -Higher education - City-Data Forum”>Best UC for Finance/Business..or college for trading/investing. (computer science, degrees) - Colleges and Universities -Higher education - City-Data Forum)</p>

<p>And I have made the decision to get a master degree, UCB UCLA UCSD wich would be a better uni for me to transfer?</p>

<p>I think all 3 are great. However, UCSD is not that great for finance and USC is better. So, choose between UCB and UCLA. I think UCB is the better choice.</p>

<p>Good Luck!</p>

<p>Thank you~~!</p>

<p>I think you should major in whatever you are passionate about. Your interests should dictate your graduate degree and your eventual career, not the other way around. Besides, you may later decide that you don’t want to go to graduate school - not everyone does - and then you can use whatever your undergraduate major is to do work.</p>

<p>The upside is both of those undergraduate majors are highly employable, with some of the lowest unemployment rates of all majors Math has the lowest, I believe. Math will be the “best” for finance in particular, not simply because it’s a less popular major (and graduate schools don’t pick like that - “Oh, who’s unusual?” They pick who is best prepared to complete the work at their school) but because finance involves a LOT of math. However, even if you major in computer science, if you follow a math-heavy curriculum you should be okay should you still choose to go into finance.</p>

<p>You should also not pick your college solely on how it “looks” to graduate schools. There’s a chance you may not even go to grad school, and besides, you have to spend 4 years there. It’s not just going to be a line on a resume. All of those universities are great schools, and where you went to college matters a lot less than what you did with it.</p>

<p>Lastly, do not assume that prestige has an inverse relationship with your GPA - that you will get a higher GPA at a lower-ranked school. It doesn’t exactly work that way. Even between schools, some classes are harder than others, and some top schools are known for grade inflation. Even without grade inflation, though, just because a school is “lower-ranked” in USNWR’s eyes doesn’t mean that 100% of it’s classes are easier than 100% of a higher-ranked school. You all should also realize that <em>no one</em> cares about USNWR-type rankings after high school, except the parents of college-bound seniors.</p>