Thank you so much for making this video! I'm getting ready to apply to some masters programs in Canada but I have a mathematical physics undergrad degree, not a statistics degree. So hearing that you also had a non-statistics degree is encouraging. By the time I apply, I'll have about 5 statistics courses under my belt and I'm hoping that is sufficient.
Yeah you have more stats courses under your belt at that the time of entering the program, so it should ease you into it. Grad-level probability might be a sticking point, it was definitely the first major hurdle I ran into
Such a great video. Just what i was looking for. By the way, if i havent studied mathhs or stats or computer sciene. Did biology masters. N want to switch 🤦♀️ how hard do you think it would be? N should i take some undergrad college courses in math or stats. I wonder if programming like ms health informatics is a better option? It has just programming n coding it appears. Biostats is gona have a lota theory n maths
Great video! I did my masters in statistics at Carleton University in Canada. Your program sounds a lot more fun and useful than mine. Unfortunately, I find that the quality of the professor dictates the quality of the class more than the topic. And its nearly impossible to get a sense of the professors unless you know someone in the program. Even there, they might have had different professors.
I'm probably taking my master's in applied statistics in october, and the two modules that I'm currently split between are machine learning and biostatistics. I'm a software dev who's always been interested in the medical field, so both of these options are very appealing to me, but I'm not sure which one would offer a better job outlook after.
From what I’ve seen, machine learning will help you out more with data scientist positions with a predictive bent to it, while the biostat stuff will help gear you more towards statisticians. I’d recommend looking through a few “data scientist” and “senior statistician” (just a title thing) job postings on LinkedIn and see what kinds of things the roles require. Hopefully one of them will jump out as more appealing during this process for you. This has the added benefit of showing you what’s actually expected in jobs as opposed to just what you learn in coursework
I love biostatistics. I am from Brazil. I have a master degree in Public Health and work with research in the public health field and medicine. I would like to have a partnership with you bro.
Biostatistics lends itself nicely to statistician positions in pharma companies or even data scientist positions in tech. At least those are the ones that I’ve seen in my own internship search process
@@very-normalDo you think it’s worthwhile over a CompSci or Data Sci masters? Im aiming for Silicon Valley with UCB and UCLA as my college of choice Money isn’t everything but I’m from the UK the fee is very high . Graduated with 90% from a top 10 yet I’ve completely stagnated Americans don’t know how much better they have it
I can give you my two cents. To be upfront, I think doing a biostats would be better because it’s naturally more applied. But of course, it’s my major so take that with a grain of salt lol Some stats MS students sometimes take the biostat classes I TA for. A common theme I’ve noticed is that it’s much harder for them to think in terms of applied problems like clinical trials. They’re much more comfortable with the math, but it doesn’t always translate into being good at applied stuff. Biostatistics is naturally applied so you’re always working with that context in mind. Some programs even make the biostat students take statistics classes in the math department, so the training effectively is the same in some places. Even though I’m in biostats, I’ve been okay with getting interviews in data scientist positions. The “bio” part doesn’t take away from the statistical training. That could be something to check for in the programs you apply to. I don’t know anything about your background or career goals, so that’s all I can suggest for now. I hope this is helpful! Let me know if you have more questions
@@very-normal I have a background in pure mathematics. But I concentrated my life science classes in biology. For my master’s, I wanted to do something practical that’ll get me a job. So, something in data analysis, date science. I would love to get a job in government as a statistician. I thought biostatistics would’ve been to specialized to go anywhere else but your video changed my view.
@@very-normal thank u very much Another question plz In your opinion Which career has more jobs opportunity Biostatistics or bioinformatics?? Cause I don't like bioinformatics And I wanna be biostatitican But I'm a pharmacist
Thank you so much for making this video! I'm getting ready to apply to some masters programs in Canada but I have a mathematical physics undergrad degree, not a statistics degree. So hearing that you also had a non-statistics degree is encouraging. By the time I apply, I'll have about 5 statistics courses under my belt and I'm hoping that is sufficient.
Yeah you have more stats courses under your belt at that the time of entering the program, so it should ease you into it. Grad-level probability might be a sticking point, it was definitely the first major hurdle I ran into
dude, I love your channel
I have been looking for this kind of video for so long
Such a great video. Just what i was looking for. By the way, if i havent studied mathhs or stats or computer sciene. Did biology masters. N want to switch 🤦♀️ how hard do you think it would be? N should i take some undergrad college courses in math or stats. I wonder if programming like ms health informatics is a better option? It has just programming n coding it appears. Biostats is gona have a lota theory n maths
Great video! I did my masters in statistics at Carleton University in Canada. Your program sounds a lot more fun and useful than mine. Unfortunately, I find that the quality of the professor dictates the quality of the class more than the topic. And its nearly impossible to get a sense of the professors unless you know someone in the program. Even there, they might have had different professors.
Yeah I wholly agree. Some classes are amazing and you get the most out of them, but others are a needless struggle
I'm probably taking my master's in applied statistics in october, and the two modules that I'm currently split between are machine learning and biostatistics. I'm a software dev who's always been interested in the medical field, so both of these options are very appealing to me, but I'm not sure which one would offer a better job outlook after.
From what I’ve seen, machine learning will help you out more with data scientist positions with a predictive bent to it, while the biostat stuff will help gear you more towards statisticians. I’d recommend looking through a few “data scientist” and “senior statistician” (just a title thing) job postings on LinkedIn and see what kinds of things the roles require.
Hopefully one of them will jump out as more appealing during this process for you. This has the added benefit of showing you what’s actually expected in jobs as opposed to just what you learn in coursework
I have questions:how do you switch from bachelor major?As many institutions only accept masters from same bsc department
❤ thank you for making this!
Found this helpful!
I love biostatistics. I am from Brazil. I have a master degree in Public Health and work with research in the public health field and medicine. I would like to have a partnership with you bro.
in US, most registered nurses can get $60+, much more than Biostatisticans do! I wonder why lots of people study for Biostatistics for ?
doctors need to publish papers too and they desperately need help
What about the jobs you can get afterwords?
I have a bachelors in Computer Science and AI
Biostatistics lends itself nicely to statistician positions in pharma companies or even data scientist positions in tech. At least those are the ones that I’ve seen in my own internship search process
@@very-normalDo you think it’s worthwhile over a CompSci or Data Sci masters?
Im aiming for Silicon Valley with UCB and UCLA as my college of choice
Money isn’t everything but I’m from the UK the fee is very high . Graduated with 90% from a top 10 yet I’ve completely stagnated
Americans don’t know how much better they have it
I’m debating on whether to do biostatistics or regular statistics for my masters. Any advice?
I can give you my two cents. To be upfront, I think doing a biostats would be better because it’s naturally more applied. But of course, it’s my major so take that with a grain of salt lol
Some stats MS students sometimes take the biostat classes I TA for. A common theme I’ve noticed is that it’s much harder for them to think in terms of applied problems like clinical trials. They’re much more comfortable with the math, but it doesn’t always translate into being good at applied stuff.
Biostatistics is naturally applied so you’re always working with that context in mind. Some programs even make the biostat students take statistics classes in the math department, so the training effectively is the same in some places. Even though I’m in biostats, I’ve been okay with getting interviews in data scientist positions. The “bio” part doesn’t take away from the statistical training. That could be something to check for in the programs you apply to.
I don’t know anything about your background or career goals, so that’s all I can suggest for now. I hope this is helpful! Let me know if you have more questions
@@very-normal I have a background in pure mathematics. But I concentrated my life science classes in biology. For my master’s, I wanted to do something practical that’ll get me a job. So, something in data analysis, date science. I would love to get a job in government as a statistician. I thought biostatistics would’ve been to specialized to go anywhere else but your video changed my view.
Can u give me plz a roadmap to learn biostatistics on my own By self taught?? I'm a pharmacy student
Yes! I can come up with something for you in a future video, keep an eye out!
@@very-normal thank u very much
Another question plz
In your opinion
Which career has more jobs opportunity
Biostatistics or bioinformatics??
Cause I don't like bioinformatics
And I wanna be biostatitican
But I'm a pharmacist
Hi, did your Masters had wetlab?
nope! biostats is all code
@@very-normal That's great.
And it's mostly R language, right?
Yes! Most programs I’ve seen will use R, and some have supplementary classes on SAS
What university did you get the masters ?
I went to Columbia University for my Masters, specifically their public health school
first I guess?