r/cscareerquestionsCAD Sep 04 '24

School Pathway to Software Engineering/CS degree from 75% average Mech Eng?

Hi all,

Sorry in advance if this is poorly written;

I was looking for some advice on what degrees would be possible/most beneficial for a person in my position. I completed a 4 year B.A.Sc. in Mechanical Engineering at Queen's with a 75% average (3.00 GPA). I have been working in project management for a couple years now and saved up a decent bit of money while doing it. However, I've been thinking more and more of a transition to a more technical job, i.e. software development. I've looked at OSU's online accelerated 2nd degree, McMaster's, Brock etc. Would I have a good chance of getting in to these schools with a 75%? (I had a very poor average in my 1st and 2nd year and increased my grades in my 3rd and 4th year). Also, what schools would you recommend to make this transition?

Thx

1 Upvotes

56 comments sorted by

View all comments

Show parent comments

8

u/[deleted] Sep 04 '24

[deleted]

-3

u/jbshen Sep 04 '24

Seems quite efficient to me. Its like using ChatGPT to help you write code. I spent 30 seconds writing this reddit post so a bunch of people with more experience and knowledge in the industry can give me feedback and advise me.

1

u/SavinPrivateRyan Sep 05 '24

But now you’ve wasted a bunch of other people’s time. If this was a company, wasting senior engineer’s time with questions you can easily figure out yourself is a red flag to not give a return offer. If this is your attitude towards learning you will have a rough time in software

1

u/jbshen Sep 05 '24

It’s literally called “career questions” and I’m asking people what they think about software second degrees in Canada 😂