[IP] Los Angeles Times: Tech Bust Zaps Interest in Computer Careers
http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-grads20jul20,1,4137886.story? 
coll=la-home-headlines
Tech Bust Zaps Interest in Computer Careers
By Alex Pham
Times Staff Writer
July 20, 2004
There used to be waiting lists for Rick Ord's classes as students  
packed 200-seat auditoriums to scribble down bits of code once thought  
to unlock a life of riches and security.
These days, Ord's lectures on systems programming at UC San Diego  
convene in smaller halls with plenty of empty seats.
It's the same scene on campuses across the country, as enrollment in  
computer science programs has dropped sharply — down 23% from 2002 to  
2003.
After flocking to computer science during the technology boom, students  
are fleeing it almost as fast, spooked by tales of unemployed  
programmers watching their jobs migrate to India and Eastern Europe.
Ironically, the enrollment dip is occurring just as companies prepare  
to ratchet up hiring, prompting worries about a potential shortage of  
domestic tech workers when engineers from the Class of 2007 graduate.  
Long term, some fear that continuing declines could hamper  
technological innovation.
The Labor Department projects that the number of jobs for computer  
software engineers will grow 46% from 2002 to 2012. Earlier this year,  
Microsoft Corp. founder Bill Gates barnstormed five engineering schools  
to drum up interest.
"Computer science today is poised to do all these amazing things,"  
Gates told students at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where  
computer science enrollments dropped 44% from 1999 to 2003.
The decline has hit just about every type of school. At UC Berkeley,  
the number of students enrolling in computer science and computer  
engineering dropped 41% in that period. Enrollments at Georgia  
Institute of Technology in Atlanta fell 45%.
Nationwide, new enrollments are at 1996 levels — and few expect them to  
rebound soon.
"It's been precipitous," said John Guttag, head of MIT's electrical  
engineering and computer science department.
At UC San Diego, home to the largest engineering school in the  
University of California system, applications to the program fell 24%  
from 2002 to 2003.
Jeanne Ferrante, associate dean of the UC San Diego school of  
engineering, said there was little mystery why. After hovering under 2%  
in the late 1990s, the jobless rate for computer scientists and systems  
analysts grew to 5.4% in the last three months of 2003. It then jumped  
to 6.7% in the first quarter of this year — outstripping the overall  
national unemployment rate of 6.1%.
"It used to be that students could name their job, their salary and  
their bonuses," Ferrante said. "Now it's not as easy."
That scares Robert Omoto. Two years into his undergraduate studies at  
UC San Diego, the 20-year-old Sacramento native chose to major in  
biology rather than computer science, even though he's been fascinated  
with technology since grade school.
After graduation, he plans to join his parents' optometry business.  
"Everybody needs healthcare," Omoto said. With computer science, "you  
can't be sure there will be a job after you graduate."
Phuc Ly, a computer science major at UCLA, graduated in June but  
considers the five years he spent getting his degree "a waste of time."
"My father basically wanted me to major in computer science so I could  
make a lot of money and support my family," said Ly, a 22-year-old from  
San Jose. Inspired by the tech bubble, Ly's father wanted him to become  
a millionaire. "That's not going to happen, obviously."
Instead, Ly plans to teach English in Japan while he contemplates new  
career paths.
Like many of his classmates, Ly signed up for computer science at the  
height of the technology boom in 1999. But the bubble burst and legions  
of programmers were laid off. Enrollment, which tends to lag behind  
employment by a year or two, took a dive in 2003 — falling to 17,706  
new students nationwide from 23,033 the year before.
For their part, tech companies are trying to reassure nervous students  
that jobs are out there. Gates' college tour was part of that effort.  
His company plans to hire 4,000 new workers over the next 12 months.
"There's been an awful lot of gloom and doom post-bubble," said Kristen  
Roby, Microsoft's senior director of college recruiting.
IBM Corp. this year announced plans to hire 4,500 U.S. workers.  
Hewlett-Packard Co.'s chief executive, Carly Fiorina, said the company  
was likely to add 5,000 workers.
"Our ability to grow depends on the people we're able to hire," said  
Doug Burke, chief executive of DefenseWeb Technologies Inc. in San  
Diego, a defense contractor that needs to hire five software engineers.  
"And right now, I'm having a very difficult time finding talented  
engineers."
Some companies have deeper concerns. "In the short term, we'll get by,"  
said Nicholas M. Donofrio, IBM's senior vice president of technology  
and manufacturing. "But in the long run, we have to take stock in this  
country's ability to create, invent and innovate. That means  
understanding the business problems, applying the technology and  
creating the solutions. That can only happen if we're better educated."
Many universities are adopting a wait-and-see approach.
Stuart Zweben, chairman of Ohio State University's computer science  
department in Columbus, Ohio, pointed out that the slide came after an  
equally sharp rise — a classic bubble. "We had a doubling of new  
computer science students" between 1995 and 2000 nationwide, he said.  
"That kind of growth was not sustainable."
Some even welcome the drop in enrollment, including students who are  
able to get into courses much more easily and professors who no longer  
have to manage bulging classes.
"The smaller class sizes make for a much better learning experience,"  
said David DeWitt, chairman of computer science at the University of  
Wisconsin at Madison.
Calvin Park, a second-year UC San Diego computer science student, is  
thrilled that his classes aren't packed.
"I see computer science as an art," Park said. "Thank goodness all the  
people who are only interested in making money are out."
Copyright 2004 Los Angeles Times
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grads20jul20,1,1861626,print.story?coll=la-home-headlines>
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