The Computer Science program I went to didn't offer anything web related as a core subject. As an elective you could take a class in either PHP or .NET, but that was as far as web related content went. Nothing server related at all, and minimal training in linux command line. On the whole the CS program at my school was almost entirely about programming, and the sysadmin side of CS was never really discussed much. This was something I brought up with my advisor, and he said that ABET certification drove the courses, and there wasn't room for anything sysadmin side.
There is no "sysadmin" side of Computer Science. You'll want a MIS degree or something similar that is more of a vocational education than a scientific discipline.
My university used to call my degree CIS, Computer Information Systems. Didn't have some of the classes the pure CS degree required, like digital circuits, and most importantly to starting-from-no-algebra-taken-before me, no Calculus.
The Computer Science program I went to didn't offer anything web related as a core subject. As an elective you could take a class in either PHP or .NET, but that was as far as web related content went. Nothing server related at all, and minimal training in linux command line. On the whole the CS program at my school was almost entirely about programming, and the sysadmin side of CS was never really discussed much. This was something I brought up with my advisor, and he said that ABET certification drove the courses, and there wasn't room for anything sysadmin side.
There is no "sysadmin" side of Computer Science. You'll want a MIS degree or something similar that is more of a vocational education than a scientific discipline.
My university used to call my degree CIS, Computer Information Systems. Didn't have some of the classes the pure CS degree required, like digital circuits, and most importantly to starting-from-no-algebra-taken-before me, no Calculus.