Metadata
Title
Computational Social Science
Category
general
UUID
6e0109ca9e0942d0beedc023595904c5
Source URL
https://catalog.ucsd.edu/curric/CSS-gr.html
Parent URL
https://catalog.ucsd.edu/front/courses.html
Crawl Time
2026-03-16T04:25:49+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Computational Social Science

Source: https://catalog.ucsd.edu/curric/CSS-gr.html Parent: https://catalog.ucsd.edu/front/courses.html

[ undergraduate program | courses ]

(858) 534-3001\ css-advising-g@ucsd.edu\ http://css.ucsd.edu

All courses, faculty listings, and curricular and degree requirements described herein are subject to change or deletion without notice.

The master of science (MS) in computational social science brings together formal models from the social sciences with the technical training to collect, structure, and utilize large-scale naturalistic data; to integrate such data with formal social science models; and to use the combination to make predictions, develop interventions, and drive policy. This interdisciplinary master’s is offered by the School of Social Sciences and housed administratively in the Department of Political Science. The MS in computational social science is a full-time, self-supporting degree program that most students complete in one year, comprising summer, fall, winter, and spring quarters.

Admission

New students are admitted in the summer of each academic year. To qualify for admission, students must have completed a bachelor’s degree typically in the social sciences or a closely related field, or a bachelor’s in math, computer science, or a related field with a minor or substantial advanced course work in one or more social science domains, and typically must have a minimum 3.0 GPA; GRE scores, a CV or resume, letters of recommendation, and a personal statement will also be considered. Pre-existing training in statistics and/or formal logic is expected and prior experience with one or more technical domains (e.g., programming, statistics, formal logic, calculus, linear algebra) is recommended. International applicants must submit official scores from the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or International English Language Testing System (IELTS), and UC San Diego minima will be respected.

Program of Study

The full-time degree program is designed to be completed in one year. In the special summer session, classes are scheduled five days a week, eight hours a day for ten weeks. In the fall, winter, and spring, students take courses that are held during regularly scheduled university class hours. Students are required to complete fifty-five units of course work (fourteen courses), comprising forty-three core units, including a ten-unit capstone project, and twelve elective units. All courses, with the exception of CSS 209 and CSS 296, must be taken for a letter grade.

Core Courses (forty-three units)

Elective Courses

Students enroll in three classes (twelve units) of elective course work related to computational social science. Please contact the program for a list of approved elective courses.

Plan

The degree follows Master Plan II: Comprehensive Examination. Under this plan, the student must complete a practical comprehensive examination designed to evaluate the student’s ability to integrate knowledge and understanding as well as utilize associated skills. The exam will be integrated into host courses, and will normally be completed over multiple quarters. More information regarding the comprehensive examination can be found in a separate document provided by the computational social science advising staff in the Department of Political Science.