Insights Blog
-- Browse All Articles --
Physics Articles
Physics Tutorials
Physics Guides
Physics FAQ
Math Articles
Math Tutorials
Math Guides
Math FAQ
Education Articles
Education Guides
Bio/Chem Articles
Technology Guides
Computer Science Tutorials
Forums
Science and Math Textbooks
STEM Educators and Teaching
STEM Academic Advising
STEM Career Guidance
Trending
Featured Threads
Log in
Register
What's new
Search
Search
Search titles only
By:
Science and Math Textbooks
STEM Educators and Teaching
STEM Academic Advising
STEM Career Guidance
Menu
Log in
Register
Navigation
More options
Contact us
Close Menu
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
Forums
Science Education and Careers
STEM Career Guidance
Career Advice regarding computational science
Reply to thread
Message
[QUOTE="jedishrfu, post: 6018427, member: 376845"] Your software skills should complement your applied math studies and your computational science studies. From there, employers will look at you as an applied mathematician with computational modeling/simulation software skills. While you’re preparing for school, have you looked at Matlab, Julia, numerical python or open source physics ? These are the areas where computational science budding. Matlab is used extensively by many engineering departments and companies. Julia is an open source variant of Matlab similar but not the same and geared to interoperate with python, fortran and r. [/QUOTE]
Insert quotes…
Post reply
Forums
Science Education and Careers
STEM Career Guidance
Career Advice regarding computational science
Back
Top