Hi everyone
I am a recent honours graduate from Australia. I currently hold a
Bachelor of Science (Biomedical Science) with a major in bioscience and minor in advance biochemistry and
Bachelor of Science (Honours) - Biochemistry (upper second class honours)
I am interested pursuing a research career in bioinformatics, however the phd bioinformatics scholarships require experience and formal education/training (basically a major) in bioinformatics, mathematics/statistics, or computer science which I have none.
Therefore I have decided to pursue a masters. however I can't decide whether to do a masters in bioinformatics or a masters in IT (CS). I have read many of the forum posts and many have stated that bioinformaticians who come from a biology background have very poor programming skills and vice versa. Therefore I want to ask is it better to do a masters in IT (CS) in order to be fluent in a programming language or do a masters in bioinformatics?
Thank you and much appreciated
Jason
You don't need a CS masters to become fluent in a programming language. I can't count the number of CS degree holders I've come across who can't solve even simple practical programming problems. if you want to learn how to program, pick the language you want to learn, buy a few books, and do some challenges (like www.rosalind.info). Quicker, better, cheaper. Bioinformaticians who are lousy programmers simply didn't put the effort in. It has nothing to do with their biology background.
Relevant posts:
Masters in Bioinformatics vs Masters in Information Technology (Computer Science)
Will a Masters in Bioinformatics help me in getting a job?
Am I Sabotaging Myself by Getting a Masters Instead of a PhD?
Economics of a career in bioinformatics
"i have read many of the forum posts and many have stated that bioinformaticians who come from a biology background have very poor programming skills"-- it all depends, on someone's willingness and how hard one work. I suggest to do masters in bioinformatics if you have never done anything in programming. Jumping immediately after after Biomedical science or biochem to IT seems to be a bit ambitious to me. You acquire knowledge you need in Bioinf degree, but you learn to program and other stuff with experience basically.