(upbeat music)
- Hi there, my name is Sam Clark,
and welcome to Crimson Education.
Today, we're gonna be talking about
the top 10 universities for
Computer Science in the world.
These rankings are
based on the QS rankings
of colleges and universities,
which are based on such factors as
academic reputation, employer reputation,
citations per professor and the H Index.
If you want to learn
a bit more about that,
you can go to QS' website,
but the point being
that these are based on
an index of a number of
factors and by no means
necessarily the definitive
rating of what the best
Computer Science schools are in the world.
If you wanna learn more
about what the best
Computer Science school for you might be,
please click the link below for
a free academic consultation
with one of our academic experts.
According to Oxford University,
you could say it way better than I could,
Computer Science is all about
learning and understanding
the mathematical, scientific
and engineering principles
underlying every kind of computing system,
from mobile phones and
the internet via systems
that interpret natural language,
to the supercomputers that
forecast tomorrow's weather
or simulate the effects of
disease on the human heart.
What we're gonna be talking about is
what the best universities
in the world are
to learn Computer Science,
both at a practical level
and also intellectually
and theoretically.
(upbeat music)
Let's do it.
Number 10 on our list is the
National University of Singapore, or NUS.
The NUS School of Computing was founded
out of the Nanyang University
Department of Computer
Science, which started in 1975,
and was the first of
its kind in Singapore,
and still the best in Singapore.
NUS doesn't just focus
on giving its students
the practical skills for Computer Science,
for Data Management, that
sort of thing academically,
they're also really,
really big on connecting
their students with
entrepreneurial opportunities
and mentorship.
A big example of this is
something which is called
The Furnace, which is the
start-up incubator at NUS,
which offers funding,
mentorship and a lot of other
fantastic resources in infrastructure,
so that Computer Science
students can not only learn
about CS, but can take
their start up ideas
from ideation to completion,
under the mentorship of industry titans.
Number nine on our list is ETH Zurich,
the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology,
whose Computer Science
program was founded in 1981.
There are 30 professors
from over 10 countries
in the department teaching
more than 1,400 students
with 60 post-docs.
ETH Zurich is all about collaboration.
They have a lot of ties to the
Electrical Engineering Department
and the Mathematics Department.
They're also creating a lot
of collaborations recently
with other disciplines, including:
physics, the life sciences
and mechanical engineering,
so that Computer Science
students are focused on using
their skills and applying
them to other sciences
to better the world.
ETH Zurich also has a
lot of connections to
big industry players, such
as IBM, Google, Microsoft,
and Disney.
Number eight on our list is a
school that I'm probably not
pronounce entirely correctly,
because I haven't taken
French since high school.
EPFL, the Ecole polytechnique
federale de Lausanne,
(ding)
in Switzerland.
EPFL is an institute that
focusing on the Natural Sciences
in Engineering, so naturally,
it has a lot of great ties
for Computer Science students
to collaborate with other
students to really benefit
the sciences.
One of the biggest draws to EPFL
isn't just it's curriculum
and fantastic faculty
in the Computer Science Department,
but also its internship program
which connects its Computer
Science students to places
such as Google, Facebook, Microsoft,
who recruit directly on
campus and work with EPFL
to create fantastic
internship opportunities
for their students.
Courses at EPFL can be
taught in French and English.
They highly recommend that
you know both languages
if you're gonna go there.
I won't go there. For many reasons.
One is that I can't speak French.
The other is that I don't
know Computer Science.
Number seven on our list is Harvard
in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Harvard is home to one of the most famous
Computer Science courses in the world,
known as CS50 Introduction
to Computer Science,
which is not only taught at
Harvard in its world famous
Sanders Theater, but is
also taught online now
to thousands of students
all around the world.
You might be able to take
those classes yourself.
A very exciting development
at Harvard is that in 2014
the University announced
that it was going to expand
its Computer Science faculty by 50%,
thanks to an enormous
donation by Steve Ballmer,
who you might know from
his work in being the
Microsoft CEO.
- [Announcer] Ladies and
gentle, Steve Ballmer.
(audience applause)
- Woo! Woo! Woo!
(upbeat music)
Come on! Get up!
- Harvard Computer Science
students can know that they are
at the forefront of research opportunities
in artificial intelligence,
computational linguistics,
data management systems and more,
especially through collaborations
the Computer Science Department
has with such institutes
as the Center for Research
on Computation Society,
the institute for Applied
Computational Science
in the Birkman Center
for Internet and Society.
Number six on our list is
the University of Oxford,
whose Computer Science
program only has about
160 undergraduates and has a
new degree in Computer Science
and Philosophy,
which includes and even
smaller cohort of students.
In addition to Oxford's
groundbreaking work at the
Inner Section of Computer
Science and Philosophy,
they also have a lot of
practical partnerships
with many institutions,
both on the research side
and on the internship side.
This includes Intel, Microsoft,
as well as government
and public funded institutions
within the United Kingdom,
including the Department
of Traded Industry
and the National Health Service.
If you're studying
Computer Science at Oxford,
you can guarantee that
you'll be working with
major companies or with the
government of the UK itself,
on groundbreaking Computer Science work.
Number five is the
University of Cambridge.
I'm gonna start with this
one with a little plug.
If you want to watch
a day in the life of a
Cambridge Computer Science student,
watch a day in the life
Computer Science student
on our channel featuring
a fantastic student
named Richard Ngo,
whose done a lot of work
in Artificial Intelligence
and works now Google.
Cambridge was one of the first pioneers
in the actual study of Computer Science
and continues to be at the
helm leading the best research
in the world on it.
This might not be apparent from the
beautiful gothic buildings
around Cambridge,
but Cambridge is right now
in an area known as the
Silicon Fen, sort of like Silicon Valley,
but more British.
There's more than 1,000
specialized computing
and advanced technology
companies that are sprouting up
in the Cambridge area,
which means a huge opportunity
for Computer Science students
at Cambridge to work with those
new developing CS companies.
Cambridge not only has a
huge emphasis on practical
programming skills,
but also likes to steer its
students to the underlying
theories in business, law,
government and economics.
They love having their
students talk about how
those theories play out
in Computer Science.
Like all other courses at
Cambridge, your evaluation,
if you're studying Computer
Science at Cambridge,
will be heavily weighted
towards assessments
and papers taken at the end of term.
Number four on our list is the
University of California at Berkeley,
which is just a short
distance from Silicon Valley.
The Electrical Engineering and
Computer Science Department
at UC Berkeley offers two
distinct degree options
for students interested
in Computer Science.
You're gonna have to get
a Bachelor of Science,
offered by the College of Engineering,
or a Bachelor of the
Arts in Computer Science,
which would be offered at the
College of Letters and Science.
While the faculty in
courses at UC Berkeley
are some of the best in the world,
perhaps one of the biggest
benefits of studying
at Berkeley is its close
proximity to Silicon Valley.
A lot of UC Berkeley
graduates in Computer Science
go directly into Silicon Valley,
or even work in Silicon Valley
for major tech companies
at the same time as they're
studying at Berkeley.
Number three on our list is
Carnegie Mellon University,
specifically in their
School of Computer Science.
A lot of exciting work
is going on right now
at Carnegie Mellon University,
which offers fantastic programs
for its Computer Science
students and groundbreaking research
and a great example of
this is a brand new degree
at the CM School of Computer Science,
which is aimed specifically
at preparing researchers
for AI directed experimentation.
It's called the Master of
Science and Automated Science,
Biological Experimentation,
and it's gonna be
beginning and Fall of 2019.
CMU places a huge on emphasis
on interdisciplinary majors,
such as Computer Science in the Arts
and Music in Technology.
Number two on our list
is Stanford University,
which is located in Palo Alto,
near the heart of Silicon Valley.
That's right. Silicon Valley.
You can walk from Stanford to Google.
I know I said that UC Berkeley
was close to the heart
of Silicon, but Stanford is too.
They're both fantastic
schools with some of the best
Computer Science programs in the world,
located to the biggest,
most exciting tech companies
in the world.
Stanford's Computer Science
department is housed
within its Department of Engineering
and has 10 different tracks,
including Artificial Intelligence,
Human Computer Interaction
and Bio-Computation.
Similar to some of the other
universities I discussed today,
Stanford places a huge emphasis
on interdisciplinary work,
making sure that its
Computer Science students
are working with other
students in areas such as
linguistics, genetics, medicine,
engineering and manufacturing.
And number one on our
list is a huge shocker.
The Massachusetts Institute
of Technology, MIT.
The Electrical Engineering and
Computer Science department
at MIT is the largest department at MIT
and starting salaries
for students graduating
with a Bachelors Degree in
Computer Science from MIT
are well over $100,000.
MIT's Electrical Engineering
and Computer Science program
offers five undergraduate degrees at MIT
as well as a Masters in Engineering,
which is available to undergrads.
They also recently changed
their undergrad degree programs
in order to give students more flexibility
so they can pursue even
more of their own interests.
MIT is the cream of the crop.
So, that has been the Top 10
Computer Science Universities
in the world.
As I said at the beginning of this video,
these are the QS rankings
and there are many other ways
to rank these colleges and universities,
and there are many other ways to find the
Computer Science school
that is the best fit
for you in particular.
If you want to start your
journey to finding the school
that's the best for you,
click the link below for a
free academic consultation
with one of our academic experts
and they'll chat with you and
figure out what is the best
fit for you.
Is it MIT, is it Stanford,
is it Carnegie Mellon,
is it a university that
you've never even heard of?
I'm Sam Clark with Crimson Education.
Please like and subscribe.
Thank you for watching.
