Learn why it’s important that UW–Madison’s biggest major is computer science

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From producing graduates who are ready for today’s tech-oriented jobs to spinning off young companies to working with companies on research projects, the UW–Madison Department of Computer Sciences is one of the university’s fastest-growing assets.

Attendees to the Tech Council Innovation Network luncheon on Feb. 28 in Madison can learn more about the department’s work and what it can mean for the Wisconsin economy. The luncheon will be held at the Sheraton Hotel on Madison’s John Nolen Drive. Registration and networking begin at 11:30 a.m., lunch at noon, and the presentation at 12:30 p.m.

Part of the UW–Madison School of Computer, Data and Information Sciences, the department is home to about 2,200 undergraduate majors — a growing number that prompted the start of construction on a new campus home near the Discovery Building. Privately funded, the building will also house the Center for High Throughput Computing, the American Family Insurance Data Science Institute, and the Department of Biostatistics & Medical Informatics.

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