So, it's been three years since I graduated from high school, and I'm just about to start university proper (currently going to the summer term, which is just one or two classes crammed into just over a month); the reason for the gap is due to the whole conscription thing we have going on over here, though that isn't really relevant to my question - just a little bit of background to pre-empt any "why were you slacking for three years?" questions :P
I'm going to be majoring in Computer Science, which is a four year honours degree course. The university is also offering a double-degree program in either Management or Management of Technology, which I'm thinking of taking up (in the latter, since it seems like it'd be more related to my main major.)
I was just wondering if anyone had experience doing a double-major as an undergrad, since any searches I've done for this specific course (at the uni I'm going to) turn up results anywhere from "sure, it's doable" to "you'll have to work really hard and do extra classes or you won't make it in four years".
The reason I'm asking now instead of after I've actually started full-time studies (and would have the benefit of other students/the faculty to bug instead) is because I'd be able to express interest in the course now and start taking classes for it in the first semester; otherwise, I'd have to wait for the second semester before applying and starting then - i.e. I'd have the slight advantage of beginning to fulfil the course requirements now. This could very well be a naive line of thinking that doesn't make any sense, since I admit I've close to no knowledge whatsoever about how things work at this level; the last three years of very little brain-use haven't helped my reasoning abilities much either.
So yeah. Any thoughts or advice would be very much appreciated.
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Just realised that my original post comes off as asking outright if I should go ahead and do it or not - that wasn't my intent, sorry. Just trying to find out more about this type of thing in general (workload, difficulty, etc.)
There's no standard for this. It depends 100% on your university's requirements, both for general education and for the specific majors.
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Some people go for contrasting majors to increase their job potential/knowledge, others try to be really strong in one area (Business, Engineering, Science, etc).
A lot of engineers do get hired into management positions later in their career, so if your long-term goal is to manage a bunch of CS guys at a company, then the double major will give you a leg up.
My advice is to go in it swinging for that double major. If you feel like it is too difficult, you could always drop the management major and turn it into some kind of business minor.
None of the classes I took counted for both majors.
The two courses don't share any classes in common, though the second major is actually six classes that make up a minor, plus an additional six on top of that; I could fit those first six into my "normal" studies (since we have around 8 classes or so that we can take as elective - very rough figures here for simplicity) to meet the minor requirements, then it'd just be seeing how to arrange the remaining ones.
Will definitely do some more pondering, though. Thanks again!
As others have said, results will most certainly vary, but you can count on being very busy.
A considerable number of pre-req class requirements for the geology major were also requirements for the chemistry major. If that over-lap was not there, it would have required perhaps another 2/3rds of a year to 1 year's worth of extra classes to get both degrees(iirc).
Oh, and I can't say that the geology degree has been all that useful, except to wow the ladies with my rock and cave knowledge. Heh. In retrospect, it might have been more useful to get a biology degree.
In the US also, business and management majors tend to be kind of bullshit. If you go to a famous business school it can help you get your foot in the door some places, but for many its a dressed up version of the old "liberal arts" degree. Adding it on to a Computer Science degree, presuming you want to be in development or something related, may not even really help you much.
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I know a number of people who have done double majors, and the time/effort is anywhere from completing in 3 years (burnout) to taking an extra semester or two to finish it up.
In part it depends on what your trajectory looks like. If you're planning on continuing your education, it generally isn't a huge, huge deal. If you're planning on going into the workforce it can set you slightly apart from other applicants in the interview process assuming a management/business focus for the second major. Your mileage with any of it will vary and is more a matter of "how hard are you willing to work yourself?" I can't speak for Singapore, but in the US the focus is pretty much on the undergrad degree and not in concentration. I was an English/Religious Studies BA in undergrad and found myself a career in finance. My girlfriend was an East Asian Studies/Gov major in undergrad, and she now works in marketing.
With something a bit more vocational like CS, if you can swing it a management double seems a good, worthwhile investment if you can pull it off.
Can you do a double degree by chance? They are pretty common in NZ and usually only require about 25-30% more workload and another year of study (for Arts/Law, not say, Science).
Strongly disagree since Singapore's university system is like NZ's (according to wikipedia at least), where honours is an entire extra year and normal bachelors degrees are only typically 3 years. If I've been informed correctly, things like US immigration requirements specifically state four year degrees to actually count for anything.
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