| ▲ | rahimnathwani 14 hours ago | |||||||
OMSCS requires ten courses to graduate. I completed one course (with an A grade) before realizing that, even at a pace of one course per semester, it was not a high enough priority for me to devote the time required to do each course well. That course was great, though, and I definitely learned some things I'm glad to have learned! IMO the instructional materials are a small part of the value. The things that stood out to me were: - the assignments - the autograding of programming assignments - giving and receiving peer feedback about written assignments - learning some LaTeX for those assignments - having an artificial reason (course grade) to persist in improving my algorithm and code [on the problems taught in that course, I wouldn't have been self-motivated enough if they were just things I came across during a random weekend] | ||||||||
| ▲ | lumost 13 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
The ability of OMSCS to scale paper writing, review, and grading with real human TAs is nothing short of astounding. While it's a ton of work (I'm just completing class #5) it's a great resource for both learning the material - and how to communicate it effectively. | ||||||||
| ▲ | BlackjackCF 13 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
Things that I loved about the program: * My fellow classmates. Had a small study group where we got on Discord to hang out and it was a blast * The TAs - they were so dedicated to the students and fantastic. MVPs of the program | ||||||||
| ||||||||