HACKER Q&A
📣 reilly3000

Would you get a CS degree today?


I’m looking for feedback from the community. My son made a plan to get a 4 year degree from a decent state university in computer science but is having second thoughts. He is looking at ~$130K in costs and 4 years of not working vs trying to find work and build a resume organically. He’s a fine young developer who loves C++ and learned Java, web dev, and EDA in his teen years for fun. His written several languages and toy compilers, ordered PCBs for his own gaming device, and built a social network in the 6th grade. He’s looking forward to higher level coursework but dreading the intro classes. His motivation for getting a degree was to be marketable to employers, but also to gain a better understanding of fundamentals. With AI making entry level programming jobs scarce, does it really make sense to invest the time and money? If not, what sort of pathway into a programming career would be a good alternative? Any and all advice appreciated.


  👤 mariocesar Accepted Answer ✓
If the goal is to learn about computer science, then yes absolutely. However, if the goal is to better one's chances of securing a meaningful and well-paid job, the answer is no.

👤 dustingetz
upvoted for visibility, quick reaction - not for $130k no way, is he self motivated enough to spend a year at home self of self study? i am a 39yo tech founder who also learned C++ at high school age, the world was different 20 years ago but 130k is a huge amount of debt, and my career was generated almost entirely from side projects. My actual degree is in computer hardware engineering despite the software career. It made no difference

👤 rcfox
I graduated 15 years ago, so who know if my advice is worth anything anymore...

I think the best part of my computer engineering program at the University of Waterloo was the integrated co-op system. (Basically, internships.) It meant my degree was 5 years instead of 4, but I got work experience and professional connections at several companies and came out with a slight profit instead of a ton of debt. I even turned my last internship into a full-time job after I graduated.


👤 linguae
Disclaimer: I’m a tenure-track community college instructor in computer science in Silicon Valley.

Assuming your son is in the United States since you mentioned “state university,” an option for reducing costs is attending a community college to get the lower-division courses in CS, math, physics, and liberal arts finished at a considerably lower cost. This also allows your son to buy some time and assess the state of the market two years from now. Two years of community college tuition is much lower than two years of university tuition, and depending on the state it might even be tuition-free.

If your son is still in high school, I also highly recommend he take Advanced Placement tests and score sufficiently well on them so that way he will get college credit for those courses. This could potentially save time in college, thus reducing costs.


👤 al_borland
For what it’s worth, college for me played a much bigger role in developing my soft skills than it did the hard skills. I find these things sorely lacking with many people I work with, especially those who are extremely technical. I think these skills helped to advance my career more than anything else, and would be transferable to nearly any type of job.

I did end up with a CIS degree (computers in the business college), rather than a CS degree (engineering college). I’m not sure how the required coursework might influence the development of various soft skill. It was never something explicitly taught, just things I was forced to develop in order to get through to graduation.


👤 Oras
> His motivation for getting a degree was to be marketable to employers

In my 20 years in the industry, I was only asked once in an interview about my degree.

> but also to gain a better understanding of fundamentals

I believe there are many courses online, such as Coursera and others if he wants to learn more. None of them will have the social aspects or networking, but they are far faster and cheaper than the traditional path.

My suggestion is to sit down with your son, and start looking at the job market for junior or graduate jobs and see if it will make sense to invest $130k and 4 years of his life.

If he realises that this is not the way forward, I would suggest he start looking for local hackathons where he can join, learn, network and have fun.


👤 Smeevy
Absolutely not. I feel terrible for people coming out of school with CS degrees right now.

Life is already difficult for young people right now and 6 figures of college debt is just putting another obstacle in their path.

For what it's worth, I don't know that the open source route is particularly fruitful either. I hear people recommending that as a way to get hired, but I never hear much about it making a difference in the hiring process.

Just my .02, though.


👤 yodsanklai
I work in a big tech company and interview candidates for software engineering jobs every day jobs. I don't pay too much attention to the resume but I don't think I've ever interviewed a candidate that didn't have a college degree. A lot also have PhDs too.

I don't know if AI will reduce demands for SWEs, but it seems pretty risky not to get a degree IMHO.


👤 trenchpilgrim
Knowing what I know now, I'd do mathematics or a hard science degree and learn programming on my own.

👤 Jtsummers
Yes, but I also double majored with math. My recommendation for decades has been to study CS if you want, but if anything else interests you get a CS minor or double major. If he's designing PCBs of his own, he may be interested in EE or CMPE as a major (and if he does CMPE, depending on the school, it's already effectively a CS minor). Programming is relatively easy to get into without a degree or with an unrelated degree, other disciplines are much more difficult to break into without the diploma.

If he's actually interested in CS, then a CS degree (or minor) makes sense. If he's interested in programming, study just about anything else and minor in CS or double major. Being an AE or MechE that has a much better than average (for the discipline) grasp on programming is a better edge career wise.


👤 nicbou
I dropped out halfway through because I had a job offer after an internship in Berlin, and working for money and exploring Europe seemed a whole lot more fun than finishing my degree back in Canada. It was the best decision I've ever made, and our tuition was only CAD 5000 per year.

I don't know. Some people will do better if they follow the established path. Others blaze their own trail and don't do well in rigid environments. I know I did not.

Ten years later, the best part of my studies are the ones that felt like a distraction and a waste of time back then: mandatory engineering and liberal arts classes. I would have learned programming on my own either way, but these other things added so much depth to my life!

I think that there are so many ways to live your twenties and grow as a human and as a professional. I strongly doubt that saddling yourself with debt is the best way to do it. Given four years of your full attention, you can achieve so much more, provided that you have the curiosity and discipline to try. I just wonder where the strength to explore the world beyond your main interest would come from.


👤 mrbombastic
4 years is a long time, especially these days, it is hard to say what the world will look like in 4 years let alone the CS industry but if he enjoys programming to the extent that it seems like he does to me it absolutely makes sense to study it and build his skills if doing that won’t put you all in massive debt.

My personal belief is that not hiring entry level engineers is unsustainable unless we get AGI capable of both outputting and _maintaining_ software better than humans, and if that happens all bets are off anyway.


👤 lostdog
Absolutely. I learned so much from my degree. Even at a decent school, the top level classes walked me through algorithms, compilers, operating systems, and graphics in a way I might not have done myself. Plus, the best people in my class were great, and discussing how to problem solve with them for coursework was very very helpful. The whole thing was very helpful as practice in a bunch of different areas of CS.

On the practical end, your degree is still a big filter for how companies screen applicants. A lack of a CS degree makes it way more difficult to get in the door. I know there are counterexamples, but 99% of my coworkers had CS degrees. Unless the money is a huge burden, or the school you would go to really is crap, then yeah, the degree makes the rest of the journey much easier.

As advice, try to get evaluated out of the intro courses and skip to higher level stuff. Often if you can show a prof that you can program (before the school year begins) you can place right into a course that is at your level.

The AI arguments are also facile. A CS degree is still the best training to be ready to use AI effectively. You understand more about how it is built than everyone else, plus you know way more about every tool surrounding the AI, and would have an easier time making your own.

I know some people have success with alternative paths. But the main road is the main road for a reason here.

Edit: Please also look at the best schools for CS, and don't just discard them as options. My coworkers out of these schools got even more out of their classes and costudents than I did. Your son sounds talented, and the best schools can help talent go even further.


👤 lexandstuff
I'm a CS professional of 15 years, getting a CS degree for visa purposes. I'm doing it via the University of London's World Class on Coursera [1], and it costs around ~20-25K USD for the whole thing. If all continues to go well, I'll be done in 3.5 years, all while working full time.

So that's another option to consider: do the CS degree part-time while working on breaking into the industry. You can adjust your workload each semester depending on circumstances, so it's flexible for someone job hunting.

[1] https://www.coursera.org/degrees/bachelor-of-science-compute...


👤 heavyset_go
If he wants to move and work abroad, he's likely going to need a degree to meet visa and sponsoring requirements. Doesn't have to be a CS degree, though.

👤 gnulinux
Maybe, ever since I graduated from college I learned again and again that pretty much anything worth thinking about in life boils down to math for me. I'd maybe/probably study CS, as a minor or double major, but Pure/Applied Math programs can be more intellectually enriching in this day and age. This is a completely person analysis, it'll change for everyone.

👤 matt3210
I work in a FAANG company, and our recruiters know better than to send us candidates without a 4yr degree minimum in any engineering (no CS required but degree required)

👤 beej71
Your son is not the average student. He will level up in school and will get hired if his interpersonal skills measure up to his tech chops. We have students who have not written their own compilers getting hired straight out of their BS today.

The competition is fiercer now, but good devs will still get hired. Average devs have a lot more trouble these days.

Does your son need to go to school? Maybe he's hireable as-is.

Finally, has he looked at financial aid? It can take a bite out of that debt.


👤 tmarsden
Sounds like your son already has strong computer science skills. I would advise he focus on something OUTSIDE of that in college like business or finance. That way he can have another tool in his toolbox. That’s what I would do in hindsight.

👤 rKarpinski
> a decent state university ... He is looking at ~$130K in costs

130k seems high for public school. How much of that is room and board?


👤 hazek112
God no.

I'd just study law or something incredibly hard that hasn't been tokenized yet.


👤 supportengineer
I think it depends on where you live. Here in the Bay Area I am assuming we have the fiercest competition of all. Companies here have their pick of thousands of H1B students with masters degrees who have optimized for leetcode interviews and are highly motivated to do whatever it takes to stay in this country and bring their family over.

Companies no longer want people who loved programming for the joy of it and the art of it.


👤 koinedad
If he enjoys programming for the sake of it I think it’s valuable but it’s not necessary. He could also get a full CS degree for a fraction of the cost if you’re factoring that in.

The job market is bad but lots of hiring for AI positions, both research and application of AI are still in demand. But this could very well be cyclical.

No matter what someone has to train the AI, control the AI, etc.


👤 7402
Paul Graham (remember him?) had an essay about 20 years ago that may be relevant to this: https://www.paulgraham.com/hs.html "What You'll Wish You'd Known"

It says when trying to figure out what to study, think about what might give you most options for the future, a future that you might have almost NO way of predicting now. He calls this "staying upwind." He gives an example:

Suppose you're a college freshman deciding whether to major in math or economics. Well, math will give you more options: you can go into almost any field from math. If you major in math it will be easy to get into grad school in economics, but if you major in economics it will be hard to get into grad school in math.

And given a choice between studying two subjects that interest you, but one is easier for you and one is a bit harder (but still within your abilities), opt for the harder one:

The best protection is always to be working on hard problems. Writing novels is hard. Reading novels isn't. Hard means worry: if you're not worrying that something you're making will come out badly, or that you won't be able to understand something you're studying, then it isn't hard enough. There has to be suspense.

You don't have to automatically agree with everything in his essays as Great Truths, but it's worth considering his ideas.


👤 tptacek
I didn't get a CS degree to begin with. I recommended against CS degrees to both my kids, even though one of them is into coding; a degree in some other discipline pairs nicely with self-taught programming skills, and a lot of my colleagues have gone that route.

So I think the real question is less "should you get a CS degree" (I would have said no in 2015 too), and more "should you plan for a career in software development".


👤 SamvitJ
Yes. I got a computer science degree, and would get one again today. Assuming you are able to finish the degree, no major has better ROI. As AI automates more and more types of work over the next few decades, computer science, the language of automation, will become more important, not less. A computer science degree teaches you the fundamentals (easy to miss in self study), builds discipline, exposes you to cutting edge topics, and opens doors to the best jobs in the industry.

Yes, it's possible to make it without a degree, but it makes things a lot more difficult. Don't second guess it. Do it!


👤 mgraczyk
Yes it's worth it, as long as he will get a job working on or with AI. There will still be plenty of jobs in 4 years and he will presumably use AI so much in college that he will be better at using it than most workers who did not study CS

👤 tayo42
Yes, college helps with the internships neccesaray to get a foot in the door. Otherwise there's nothing to differentiate your self from other applicants.

Also 130k is unessesary. Go to community College, transfer credits to public university to finish the degree.


👤 PKop
He can use the time in school to push further and advance beyond his current knowledge regardless of the level of difficulty of intro or whatever courses. At the end he will have the degree which is valuable for most other jobs even more than it is for Programming, including government jobs especially...and if you are worried about job opportunities, college will be one of the best starting paths to get foot in the door with internships and on site interviews, recruiting events etc. I don't see it being easier outside of university than inside it. Have him scour every opportunity for career events and internships.

He could always join the Army and have college paid for partially or fully at state school depending on years of service. I did this. Aside from the money it is a great experience for a young man, something most won't have and he can get paid while doing it. It will help for hiring at least for government jobs as well.

I think it is a huge mistake to believe AI will take CS jobs to a significant degree any time soon. I think if it does it will take other jobs as much or more. So not worth optimizing for that way.


👤 nudgeOrnurture
your son could move to Germany if you can't cover the cost.

if he's that bad into it, he'll be doing gigs and projects with students and cracks all over the world.

it's not about getting a degree in CS, it's about how bad you want to feed your curiosity. the field is still in it's teen years. there's whole human-like brains to build, hardware and infra and artificial minds that run on it.

employers? your son sounds like he'll be one in no time.


👤 WaltPurvis
Perhaps of interest (from today's New York Times): https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/10/technology/coding-ai-jobs...

There are many reasons why one might want a college education and college experience, but purely from a vocational advantage POV the cost and time seem hard to justify.


👤 cadamsdotcom
He may wish to consider a degree in another country.

If he goes to Finland or Australia he can get a world-class education for far less.


👤 scarface_74
Just so I don’t come off as elitist, I graduated from a no name state school in the south with a degree in computer science. But that was in the 90s.

My perspective though is going to come from someone who worked at Amazon (AWS) in 2020-2023 and mentored a couple of interns who got return offers the next year.

Companies aren’t recruiting for the most part from tier 2 schools and it’s hard to get an internship.

I was also looking for a job in late 2023 as someone who was experienced, credentialed, networked, etc.

The market for developers sucks right now. I would have probably had a hard time finding a job if it weren’t for my network and a couple of niches where I’m one of the industry experts.

When I submitted my job to hundreds of jobs as a Plan b, I heard crickets there are a lot of people chasing few jobs and to a first approximation, no one wants entry level developers. It’s getting worse as AI improves.

Anecdotally, there are projects I lead now that I would have needed at least one entry level developer to do the grunt work that I can just do myself using ChatGPT.

I would even go as far as saying if he doesn’t go to one of the top schools that companies recruit from, don’t even bother with a CS degree.

Get a degree in something else and maybe take some CS electives if he can’t get a degree from a top school.

What that something else is? I have no idea.


👤 frompdx
The cost of college is astounding. However, companies are not giving preferential treatment to non-grads. Find a school in your state with a good internship program for CS majors with a track record of converting interns to FTEs.

👤 danielmarkbruce
math + computer science is a no brainer if you like it and are smart enough to do it.

There is a strong argument that understanding the relevant math (which isn't rocket science) behind AI gives one a leg-up. Most people just can't be bothered to do it and it's really important and actually practical in the modern world. Linear algebra, calculus, probability + statistics, optimization, discrete math.


👤 flashgordon
First of all it is amazing that your son is a self starter and really a builder. It would be a shame to squash that out of him.

My thoughts (certainly not a recommendation as every situation is unique) - foundations are always going to be critical. So things like cs (not just software eng), math, physics, biology will be super important because with AI you can have the audacity to tackle 10x harder problems. Now a 150k standardized program may not be the way to go about it. (Back home education was practically free so it was not even a question but in here things are crazy so I get it).

My 2 more cents is you have a 1-2 year window where large pct of population is either wary or cautious or unaware of how to use AI properly. If your son is the curious type id encourage him to build like a maniac (heck clone a few high priced SaaS products and learn how to sell). Worst case he loses 4 years while this AI dust settles. Best case he comes out of it with Independence and confidence to do a lot more than a grad who has only done course work (and even those are established in orgs)


👤 austin-cheney
After 20 years of doing this if I could do it all over again I would get a CS degree and an engineering masters. I am a self taught developer with unrelated bachelors.

My experience doing this I have learned there is only thing that influences career fulfillment: barrier of entry. You can make money anywhere in software as dependent upon the success of your employer regardless of level, skill, or competence.

To be happy doing the work, however, requires operating at the appropriate level of challenge. If you are the smartest guy in the room everyone around will be full of excuses and selfish retardation. If you are in over your head you will be the one inventing improper excuses doing selfish things.

So, always strive for the most exclusive and challenging job you can get.


👤 jrozner
Unless he’s getting into a truly top tier school, have him go to a state university for much less. Community college and transferring is also an option but the social experience of going to a 4 year university is unique and fun. If you have something local where he can live at home or work enough while in school to cover part of the expenses, great. Spend $30-40k instead. I went to a fine state school in California and have talked to a lot of CS grads. I’ve rarely seen significant value add for paying more for a mid tier school than whatever the cheaper average option is.

👤 anilgulecha
Here's one line of thought - You can hand over 130K to your son, and let him decide.

Then he'll have to treat that as an investment, either into college (and hence he'd hopefully be Very Serious about it), or use it for something else - travelling, entrepreneurship, MF/stock investment, etc. The weight of the decision and the ensuing use of the monies are both the payoff, not a degree per-se.


👤 zevon
I think immersing yourself in a university is a good thing for a few years. It almost doesn’t matter what you study as long as you don’t treat university as a school or degree machine. Sit in on courses from other fields of study. Engage in student politics. Build a plane / car / student coffee shop. Stick your head in a lot of research labs and ask the people there questions. Roam though the cellars, liberate an old mainframe / robot arm / CNC machine and make it work again. Do theater. Whatever. Universities are big, interesting places and there are not many other environments where you can learn, try out and hack on so many different things.

👤 wink
Costs in the US have always puzzled me, so the cost/use factor is completely off.

Here in Germany I would still recommend getting a BSc in CS if you're interested in the topic.