Hi Eli,

I agree with everything that Keith wrote.  And please see our FAQ :-)

As for the SATs, some US colleges/universities don't require them for transfer students.  
So, you could consider taking night classes in the "continuing education" 
division of a university and then transferring into a degree program there or elsewhere.  
It might also be possible to avoid the GREs using the same strategy.

I would also emphasize that your undergraduate degree might only serve to 
prepare you for your graduate studies and not for employment, unless you're 
looking for a low-level technical position.  Since bioinformatics is a science, 
at least in part, most positions will require a graduate degree.

This could be a simple rule (and it's probably controversial):  If you'd like to stop at 
a master's degree, choose CS as an undergraduate major.  But, if you'd like to get a 
doctorate, choose biology as a major.  As Keith indicated, the former path is usually 
considered a bioinformatics education, while the latter path is usually considered a 
computational biology education.  That's not to say there are no doctorate programs in 
bioinformatics.  It's just that the trend I've seen is that bioinformatics is being 
increasingly associated with CS and not biology (look at the curricula for the graduate 
programs out there), and people often advise against "going the doctorate 
route" in CS (where you could find yourself overqualified for most positions).

For bioinformatics, that would mean a master's degree should be the goal, 
should you be looking for the largest number of positions available.  That's my 
2 cents anyway.  I'm others will disagree.

Cheers,
Jeff

Eli Draizen wrote:
Hello-

I am not sure if this is the right place to post this but I do not know
who else to ask. I am currently applying to college and want to study
bioinformatics. I have a few questions which my college advisors cannot
answer:

1)       Which schools have the best programs and do not care about
SAT's?
2)       Would it be better to double major in biology and computer
science and then be more focused in grad school?

3)       What is the difference between the major's bioinformatics and
computational biology?



--
J.W. Bizzaro
Bioinformatics Organization, Inc. (Bioinformatics.Org)
E-mail: [email protected]
Phone:  +1 978 562 4800
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