Courses Bioinformatics (Which math and comp sci courses to take?)

AI Thread Summary
Starting university in bioinformatics offers the opportunity to tailor an applied science Bachelor's degree by selecting minors in Math, Computer Science, and Software Engineering. The math minor includes five required courses, leading to a decision on whether to focus on statistics and probability or discrete math, such as graph theory and combinatorics, both of which have relevance in bioinformatics. For the computer science aspect, it's important to consider whether to take courses in algorithm design and advanced databases or explore other areas of computer science. Additionally, incorporating biology courses is crucial, as bioinformatics is a broad field with diverse applications. The choice of classes should align with personal interests and career goals, as the specific focus within bioinformatics can significantly influence which courses will be most beneficial.
carophil
Messages
2
Reaction score
0
Hello, I am starting university this winter and I have a question for those of you who know a little bit about bioinformatics.

My school allows me to take 3 minors (Math,Computer science,Software engineering) and turn them into an applied science Bachelor's degree. This allows me to skip a lot of the humanities and business courses I would otherwise be forced to take and let's me get a much deeper mathematical formation and more compsci credits than the regular formation.

My minor in math has 5 required courses
1.Introduction to scientific programming
2.Calculus 1
3.Linear algebra 1
4.Probability 1
5.Statistics 1

After that, I have to pick 5 math courses to complete my minor. Should I go more into statistics&probability or more into discrete math(like graph theory and combinatorics)? Which would be more useful to someone who wants to become a bioinformatician.

Also for the computer side...What should I really look out for? Should I take all the algorithm design and advanced data base courses or go into another aspect of computer science? Thanks!
 
Last edited:
Physics news on Phys.org
bump :P
 
This should help:

http://www.compbio.cmu.edu/Admissions/prerequisites.html

Make sure to reserve room for some biology courses (it may be a better idea to change the software engineering minor to a Biology one, if that's an option). Also, most of your questions depend on what you mean by "bioinformatics", as it can mean myriad things--it's a very broad field (just look at the wiki page or the research interests of people in the bioinformatics department at a big university). As you go along on your studies you'll discover what's more interesting and what you want to study, and that will direct you to whichever classes you need to take. It's pretty difficult to predict a priori which classes will be more useful without more information; however, if you have all those prerequisites (sans maybe P-chem unless you're into simulations) from the link, you'll be in good shape (for whatever it is you want to do; you haven't stated what).
 
Last edited by a moderator:
I graduated with a BSc in Physics in 2020. Since there were limited opportunities in my country (mostly teaching), I decided to improve my programming skills and began working in IT, first as a software engineer and later as a quality assurance engineer, where I’ve now spent about 3 years. While this career path has provided financial stability, I’ve realized that my excitement and passion aren’t really there, unlike what I felt when studying or doing research in physics. Working in IT...
Hi everyone! I'm a senior majoring in physics, math, and music, and I'm currently in the process applying for theoretical and computational biophysics (primarily thru physics departments) Ph.D. programs. I have a 4.0 from a basically unknown school in the American South, two REUs (T50 and T25) in computational biophysics and two semesters of research in optics (one purely experimental, one comp/exp) at my home institution (since there aren't any biophysics profs at my school), but no...
Back
Top