foxydena said:
I agree uws computing degree are more flexible with majors and sub-majors offered by any other universites.
I shall point you there:
http://www.uow.edu.au/handbook/yr2006/cour766.html
A major in Computer Science involves doing two extra third year CSCI subjects on top of the core subjects. Simple. You can then major in one of another four computing areas (will be five next year), or in one of the other areas listed (second majors almost always assume Computer Science is the first major... that is, you do all core subjects, and two extra 300-level CSCI subjects).
The majors listed on the site are the official majors. So long as you complete a Computer Science first major, they'll pretty much let you do a major from anywhere else. With just over half the degree taken up by cores, you have PLENTY of free credit points for pretty much any major of your choosing.
UWS isn't the only flexible university.
What I mean, is that UWS teach the theory and allow students to put it in practice through the practical classes.
You've pretty much got a practical subject that you take
every semester until the final project starts in UOW. That being said, none of the purely theory subjects are compulsory apart from discrete mathematics and statistics. My computer science degree so far has been prac after prac after prac. Discrete maths, statistics and my Arts degree got me away from prac computers.
What I mean other universities tend to only emphaise you the theory part and have final work experience and/or a project.
Just explained above by both acmilan and myself.
What UWS is offering practical throughout their degrees (alot units offered do) and then final project which is completed for Partnership companies throughout Western Sydney or Industry placement in the case of B Tech (IT Support).
Most, though I should hope all, IT/CompSc degrees offer that. As I mentioned above, my computing degree has just been practical subjects. You don't learn about lexical analysis or text parsing unless you have a go at it yourself. You don't learn how a processor does its processing properly unless you code a process scheduler yourself.
Aboslutely no, just about every computing degree in UWS has Maths in their course structure. i.e. Disrete mathematics and Statistics for Science, etc.
Since discrete maths is foundational for computer science, I'd assume all students doing a CompSc degree (not necessarily IT) would take it. As for statistics, it's very important to be able to understand variation and uncertainty... especially since some computing uses random numbers, and there's more than the C srand()/rand() calls.
All that post seemed to confirm is that UWS is like every other university when it comes to computing and IT.