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This is a five-year degree program which leads to both a Bachelor of Science
and a Master of Science degree at the end of the five years. Both the
BS degree requirements
and the
MS degree requirements
need to be fulfilled.
However, six credit hours of Computer Science courses at the 5000 level or
above may be counted towards both sets of degree requirements,
if they are chosen from the following list:
- CSCI 5229-3,
Computer Graphics
... if CSCI 4229 has not been taken
- CSCI 5273-3,
Network Systems
... if CSCI 4273 has not been taken
- CSCI 5312-3,
Medical Informatics
... if CSCI 4312 has not been taken
- CSCI 5314-3,
Algorithms for Molecular Biology
... if CSCI 4314 has not been taken
- CSCI 5317-3,
Genome Databases: Mining and Management
... if CSCI 4317 has not been taken
- CSCI 5322-3,
Things That Think
... if CSCI 4322 has not been taken
- CSCI 5332-3,
Game Programming
... if CSCI 4332 has not been taken
- CSCI 5342-3,
Groupware and Workflow Systems
... if CSCI 4342 has not been taken
- CSCI 5412-3,
Design, Creativity and New Media
... if CSCI 4412 has not been taken
- CSCI 5444-3,
Introduction to Theory of Computation
... if CSCI 3434 has not been taken
- CSCI 5454-3,
Design and Analysis of Algorithms
... if CSCI 3104 has not been taken
- CSCI 5606-3,
Principles of Numerical Computation
... if CSCI 3656 has not been taken
- CSCI 5753-3,
Computer Performance Modeling
... if CSCI 4753 has not been taken
- CSCI 5809-3,
Computer Animation
... if CSCI 4809 has not been taken
- CSCI 6446-3,
Chaotic Dynamics
... if CSCI 4446 has not been taken
- CSCI 6448-3,
Object-Oriented Analysis and Design
... if CSCI 4448 has not been taken
- CSCI 6838-3,
User Interface Design
... if CSCI 4838 has not been taken
In theory, therefore, the minimum number of credit hours required for the
BS/MS degree will be 152.
Students need to gain admission to this program
during the Fall of their junior year.
Tuition
For resident students, the undergraduate tuition rate will be used
throughout the BS/MS program, until and including the semester when
the student completes the requirements for the BS/MS.
For non-resident students, for the graduate portion of the BS/MS program,
the tuition rate will be: the minimum of the nonresident graduate
tuition rate minus (the resident graduate tuition rate minus
the resident undergraduate tuition rate) and the nonresident undergraduate
tuition rate, with all of the above rates being the ones for the number of
credits for which that student is enrolled. The "graduate portion of the
BS/MS program" will be defined as those semesters after the student has 128
credit hours that are applicable to the BS/MS degree, until and including
the semester when the student completes the requirements for the BS/MS.
Admission
Admission requires an application, available in ECOT 720.
Applicants must have completed two 3000-level CS courses on the Boulder campus,
must provide two letters of recommendation from CU Boulder Computer Science
faculty members, and have a minimum GPA of 3.50.
For further information about admission to the program, including application
deadlines, contact
Graduate Program Advisor Rajshree Shrestha.
Advising
For academic advising related to the concurrent BS/MS degree, contact
Professor Harold Gabow.
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