In general Masters in CS programs require either a BS in CS or coursework in areas like operating systems, data structures, algorithms, computability/complexity etc. These courses generally have prereqs such as 1-2 semesters worth of programming courses, discrete math etc. Someone without a CS background most likely would not be accepted to a standard MS program.
aerioux|9 years ago
This is trivially verifiable on linkedin. That said they do require high ugrad GPAs frequently.
Source: Knowing Georgia Tech Phd TA's and being a CMU TA for Master's classes
grayshirts|9 years ago
There are exceptions but in general CS Masters programs look for sufficient coursework/background in Computer Science and Mathematics. An art major with 0 math/programming courses will find it difficult to be accepted to a Masters program in CS.
ajdlinux|9 years ago
dsacco|9 years ago
In my experience I've found (ironically), that it's generally the more reputable universities that are actually willing to do this, because "celebrity" (and I use that word very loosely) professors can talk a promising graduate student in over admissions department's veto at those institutions.
dsacco|9 years ago
grayshirts|9 years ago
XenophileJKO|9 years ago