UPDATE: iwanttogotocarnegiemellon.com rejected(iwanttogotocarnegiemellon.com) |
UPDATE: iwanttogotocarnegiemellon.com rejected(iwanttogotocarnegiemellon.com) |
With his obvious drive and skill, he'll have no problems getting internships anywhere he wants from UW. And one you've got the internship, nothing else matters.
Go go a "lesser" school and get a C.S. degree. Or even go get a degree in something other than C.S. Or don't go to school at all, just find a job (I bet you will be able to, based on what you already know) and just teach yourself all the other stuff on the side (works well if you're a natural autodidact).
Or consider a hybrid approach: get a job (full or part time) and take night classes for credit, possibly also inter-mingled with MOOCs that interest you. Don't worry about finishing a degree or meeting any certain deadline, just take the classes that interest you, learn useful skills, and build cool shit.
If I had a suggestion for someone in your shoes, I'll throw this out there: If you do go to school, either full-time, part-time, seeking a degree or not, don't take just technology courses. Take a few classes in economics, finance, history, political science, etc. Even if you take those at a community college, or as Coursera courses or something. When I look back on my career, I definitely think I would have benefited from studying more of that stuff.
If I had a second recommendation, it would be to take all the math and statistics courses you can handle.