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    Frankly, your son doesn't have "great marks" by University standards if he's forced to repeat courses. Computer Engineering might have loosened it's requirements, but it used to require a high school average somewhere in the 95-97% range: and repeated courses would definately count less than regular ones.

Well, I can speak from the knowledge that his marks on the two Math courses were in the fifties. So, yeah, he'll have to repeat the courses, and no, I'm not surprised that they want him to do so. Amusingly (or not, as it turned out), he was accepted at another university, in Computer Science. It was only when we went for the appointment with the Academic Advisor that they began backpedalling. His other computer related course marks are in the 80's and 90's. I think once he gets his Math marks up he'll be OK.

And thanks for mentioning the University of Waterloo, I know all about it .. I started there in 1976, took a year of Honours Math, then transferred to Systems Design Engineering. The joke in fourth year was that, if we were applying now, most of us wouldn't get accepted into the program we would shortly be graduating from. Apparently, York University and Ryerson University have different academic requirements for entrance -- Waterloo is, after all, known world-wide for its excellence in Engineering and Computer Science, among other areas.

    A CS or Comp. Eng. degree isn't required to be a programmer. On the other hand, if he isn't showing signs of interest by now (like writing his own code on his own inititive), is he really that interested, or is he just trying to please his Dad?

Well, I wouldn't know about what his Dad feels about Computer Science -- I'm the Step-Dad. And the problem I'm trying to solve is, he's *not* doing it to please *anyone* -- he's not doing it all. And I do know guys who were very successful at CS without a degree in it -- one guy had a Geography degree and was making $85/hour doing software development in the late 80's, which I thought was pretty impressive.

    What are his plans for the future?

He doesn't really have any. That's why I'm making an educated guess about .. guiding him into CS. We have to pick something, because I don't want him to lounge around at home for the next few years.

Alex / talexb / Toronto

"Groklaw is the open-source mentality applied to legal research" ~ Linus Torvalds


In reply to Re^2: How do I get my teenager interested in software development? by talexb
in thread How do I get my teenager interested in software development? by talexb

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