Application:Minimum requirements
Applicants should have a strong background in computer science or a related field since programming and mathematical knowledge is assumed. Moreover, applicants need to have a very good comand over the English language in order to follow the lectures and exams. Therefore, you have to fulfil the following formal requirements in order to apply to the Master in Intelligent Adaptive Systems.
- A Bachelor’s degree in computer science or a related field with 60 ECTS credit points acquired in the core field of computer science. The 60 ECTS must be listed in your transcript of records or attested by your university.
- Proof of English language proficiency by (or comparable to)
CEFR/TELC: At least Level B2 in all testing categories (listening, reading, speaking, writing) better C1 IELTS: 6.5 + B2 TOEFL: IBT 90, PBT 575, CBT 230 Cambridge: CAE or CPE
Contents
- 1 Formal Requirement: 60 ECTS credits or comparable from computer science
- 2 Formal Requirement: English language proficiency
- 2.1 Direct fulfillment of the requirement
- 2.2 Evidences that on their own do not fulfil the requirement
- 2.3 Direct rejection
- 2.4 I have a language certificate that is not listed on the website, can I send this as proof?
- 2.5 I am a native English speaker. Do I still have to send a certificate?
- 2.6 My previous degree was taught fully in English, does that count as sufficient proof?
- 2.7 I have a TOEFL certificate but can't find the institution code of Universität Hamburg?
- 2.8 More questions regarding the requirements
- 3 What does this mean for the documents I should prepare?
Formal Requirement: 60 ECTS credits or comparable from computer science
The formal requirement for the MSc IAS is a Bachelor’s degree with at least 60 credit points (ETCS) from core Computer Science (cs) courses/modules. The admission board only counts finished university courses obtained in one bachelor in cs or master in cs or a related field.
How should I evidence and display my 60 ECTS?
Evidence
Please send your official transcript of records issued by your university or other evidence attested by your university containing the credit points/hours per module/course, the total amount of credit points/hours along with the standard length in years of your program and the length you have needed to complete your study if these details aren't listed in your transcript of records.
Self-made structure table
To display the 60 ECTS in computer science, please provide a self-made structured table of all core computer science courses you have completed. This will help the IAS admission board to identify which of the courses listed in your transcript of records can be counted as core computer science courses for the required 60 ECTS. All of the information you mention, have to be found in your transcript of records. The given information should be short and precise (e.g. name and number of course as exactly given in your transcript). If they aren't listed in your transcript, please provide another source of evidence attested by your university, e.g. letter of recommendation.
Please read the detailed section about the structured selfmade table here including examples:
Selfmade table
Please do not send full module handbooks. The admission board will not read them.
The ECTS credit system is not used in my country, how can I estimate my credits?
ECTS stands for European Credit Transfer System and it is a measure for the estimated workload per module of a student. At Universität Hamburg a BSc in Informatics/Computer Science has a regular length of 3 years and requires 180 ECTS credits. One ECTS credit corresponds to about 30 hours of work and the number of credits per module is set by the lecturer. Each regular semester of a full-time student contains 30 ECTS credits. 60 ECTS credits equal one year of full-time study. Thus you can use the estimation of 60 ECTS + at least 1/3rd of a 3 year-BSc as a rough estimate to the amount of workload your completed cs courses have to fulfill. Please, note it is the applicant's task to provide proof at least 60 ECTS and information on the degree the applicant is applying with. Please, provide the information the table template is asking for if your transcript does not show ECTS.
What modules will be counted towards the 60 ECTS?
Here are some examples of module names which will likely be counted as CS content: digital signal processing, artificial intelligence, computational linguistics, software engineering, programming in ..., human-robot interaction, neural networks, introduction to computer science, data mining, image processing, algorithms, and data structures, data bases...
Modules that will not be counted include: math, engineering, mechatronics, electrical engineering, economics or soft skill subjects unless they specifically focus on cs centred content.
Can I complete courses after application to make up for missing credit points in computer science?
No, unfortunately not. The requirement of 60 ECTS needs to be fulfilled upon application unless you can specifically prove that the 60 ECTS will be finished at the end of the running semester. If you do not fulfill this requirement, your application will be rejected by the admissions board before entering the selection process.
Formal Requirement: English language proficiency
The admission board is looking for evidence of a language level that ensures that you can both follow a complex lecture as well as communicate well in oral and written form. Students that don't have the necessary level won't be able to follow lectures, complete homework and seminar papers, or pass oral exams and thus not be able to complete our program.
Direct fulfillment of the requirement
- Sending one of the language proficiency tests in the list displaying at least the minimum score:
CEFR/TELC Level >= at least B2 in all categories or C1 IELTS >= Overall band 6.5 + B2 (*with a minimum subscore of 6.0 for Listening, Comprehension, Speaking, Writing) TOEFL: IBT >= 90 (*with a minimum subscore of 20 for Reading, Listening, Speaking, Writing), PBT >= 575, CBT >= 230 Cambridge >= CAE or CPE
*of course, the overall minimum level has to be reached, too
Please, contact us if you have an internationally accepted test that does not appear on this list.
The following evidence may also be accepted (please contact us):
- Native English speaker (evidenced by a copy of your ID or passport of a country with English as one of its official languages)
- Living/studying in an English-speaking country (AUS, NZ, GB, USA) for a long period (3 years or longer) (evidenced by confirmation e.g. letter of your company, university)
Evidences that on their own do not fulfil the requirement
- Medium of instruction
- English courses within your degree without an internationally accepted certificate
- Short exchanges or visits in English-speaking countries
- Essays or papers written in the English language
- Old English proficiency test score (older than 2 years)
Direct rejection
- Sending a language proficiency test with a score below the listed levels
- Applications without a language proficiency test and without an extra letter stating explicitly what you would like the admission board to accept as English proficiency requirement
I have a language certificate that is not listed on the website, can I send this as proof?
Please understand that only internationally established certificates can be counted. Certificates from local language schools and universities cannot be easily verified and therefore have to be rejected. Only listed language certificates with sufficiently high scores will immediately lead to the fulfillment of the formal requirement language proficiency.
You may send a language certificate that is not listed, however, it will be the admission board's decision whether or not it is comparable to the listed certificates. It is always a good idea to provide information about the certificate and why you send in a different language certificate than listed.
Recent application periods have shown that most applicants have been directly rejected without English proficiency tests due to a very high number of applicants and/or an unclear evidenced English proficiency. Therefore it is recommended to send in one of the internationally established language certificates as listed above.
I am a native English speaker. Do I still have to send a certificate?
If you were born and are living in a country with English as one of its official languages, you do not have to provide further evidence. In this case, please send in a copy of your ID or passport. This might also apply if you have been studying or working in such a country for a long time, in this case please send in a confirmation such as a letter from your company or university. It is still recommended to provide additional proof of language proficiency with one of the listed language certificates from above.
My previous degree was taught fully in English, does that count as sufficient proof?
No. However, if your degree was obtained in a country with English as one of its official languages (e.g. Australia, New Zealand, UK, USA ...) and your certificate/transcript explicitly states that English was the medium of instruction within your entire degree (3+ years) and your university attests that all modules were taught and assessed in English, the admission board may accept this as proof of proficiency, but this will be decided on a case to case basis depending on country and institution. It is still recommended to provide additional proof of language proficiency with one of the listed language certificates.
I have a TOEFL certificate but can't find the institution code of Universität Hamburg?
If you want to submit the TOEFL scores through ETS, the departmental is: Universität Hamburg - Department of Informatics DI Code: B406. Since there usually is a considerable delay between test and the arrival of the score card, please ALWAYS add a copy of the scorecard or the results page to your documents and inform us via email: ias-info@informatik.uni-hamburg.de. If your documents do not arrive in time your application will be rejected. Some documents never reach us.
More questions regarding the requirements
What does this mean for the documents I should prepare?
See Required documents for detailed information.