10/07/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 10/08/2025 19:24
Students walking on Georgia Tech's campus
A new undergraduate major in mathematics and computing will be offered at Georgia Tech beginning next fall.
The new bachelor's degree brings together essential elements of both mathematics and computing training and includes the applications of mathematical theories relevant to computing and data, as well as the theoretical problems and real-world challenges that modern computing addresses.
"This degree stands apart by offering a balanced, integrated curriculum that develops both mathematical depth and computational fluency," said Michael Wolf, chair of the School of Mathematics. "It is ideal for students who want to understand not just how computational systems and algorithms work, but why they work, how to prove their properties, and how to build new ones from first principles."
The degree is designed to prepare students for careers in interdisciplinary fields such as artificial intelligence, computational science, data-driven modeling and automatic design, algorithm design, quantitative finance, data science, and mathematical foundations of machine learning.
"Whether creating algorithms for medical breakthroughs or building the next generation of financial trading systems, students have the tools to tackle complex, real-world challenges," said Olufisayo Omojokun, associate dean for Undergraduate Education in the College of Computing. "This integrated curriculum produces a unique kind of thinker, a computational scientist grounded in mathematical rigor, who will be indispensable in shaping the future of AI, cybersecurity, and any interdisciplinary field that demands both theoretical depth and practical, applied intelligence."
Students will choose one of three concentrations: theoretical computer science and discrete math; modeling, simulation, data, and applied math; or mathematical intelligence and data science.
Graduates from this program are expected to be:
"Computer science requires abstraction and abstract thinking, and the first computer scientists were mathematicians. Both mathematics and computer science have contributed to each other in a symbiotic way," said Abrahim Ladha, lecturer in the School of Computing Instruction. "Many students are naturally interested in both. This new degree formalizes what was already being done by our undergraduates."
The first students will enroll in the program in Fall 2026. The degree was approved at the Sept. 16 meeting of the Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia.
Learn more about the degree and its curriculum requirements at mathcomputing.gatech.edu.