Other than Waterloo, which offers 3-year "general"/"fallback" degrees (these degrees say on the diploma that they are 3-year degrees) in addition to regular 4-year degrees, and Oxbridge, where all undergrad degrees are 3 years. By target school I mean like MIT, Waterloo, Stanford, CalTech, CMU, Princeton, etc that are targeted by JS, HRT, Goog, etc.
Engineering? Master or bachelor? USA or non-USA?
Undergrad, in the US or Europe.
Based on my prior experience in 2017, most uk universities offer 3 year program, not sure about usa though
It's not that hard to finish all your graduation requirements in 3 years in many cases. A lot of BA programs (including at top schools) don't have all that many strictly required classes so it's pretty feasible to graduate in 3 years. Almost no one actually does that because college is fun and for making connections.
Yeah, with an actual 3-year program you can get a BS or BMath though while still enjoying college.
It's spelled Caltech.
Cars
Yesterday
1186
Tesla ruined whole auto industry
Tech Industry
Yesterday
1016
PM is irrelevant role and will die in next 2-3 years.
Tech Industry
Yesterday
845
Faang Engineers who got laid off, how long did it take to get a new job?
Software Engineering Career
Yesterday
633
If your team does daily standups, your manager is a micromanager
India
Yesterday
644
A list of ethnic slurs on Indians that should be banned on Blind
The University of Alaska at Anchorage offers one of the most respected 3 year degrees on the planet.
Except that's not a target school by any means.
Where do you think Alaskan programmers come from??