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Major tech companies are not just recruiting at top 3 publics. Most big tech companies also are recruiting at these regional public engineering programs like GMU, UMCP, UMBC, UVA, VCU, and VT.
I am sure they also recruit at other publics, but I know it is true for those publics. Pushing "top ranked" is a DCUM thing across this forum. It is not reality for engineering degrees. ABET sets a high floor and most employers know this. A more supportive engineering program without the weed out classes also meets the standards and is NOT usually lower quality. |
| Would your son be interested in a military service academy (USAFA, West Point, USNA etc). It’s very difficult to gain entrance but all have excellent engineering programs. |
Um…did you read the OP? I would not suggest West Point or USNA for any parent asking about a school that isn’t “soul crushing.” If you think Cornell engineering or similar is going to cause your kid too much mental anguish- a service academy is not going to be a good fit |
Good college options for the right student. Not a good fit for OP's DC. |
Disagree! If dc’s son is a happy toiler, fine. If not, quality of life/mental health really matters. Some kids can pull off straight a’s and high scores in high school without a ton of studying but have no interest in or ability to tolerate major lots of grinding-they don’t belong in the most grueling program they can get into just because they are cognitively capable of doing the work. |
| UF. |
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Part of why engineering rank does not matter so much is that most test questions have known mathematical answers (not usually subjective questions such as essays), part is ABET outlining what topics various courses should cover and outlining what courses to include in degree requirements, part is that roughly the same questions get asked.
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I worked with the president of Mines in grad school and this doesn’t surprise me at all. Based on my knowledge of him, I would expect the culture at Mines to be both challenging and supportive. |
I really appreciated my freshman orientation at MIT for not doing this. In fact, they specifically said they were not going to do the look left, look right thing. Instead the message was if you’re here, you can do the work, now go do great things. |
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Parents also impact this. If kid is getting Bs and Cs in engineering - and remains on track to graduate - celebrate that - and don't freak out that they are not getting all As.
Encourage them to find compatible serious engineering students so they can form their own study groups. |
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UVa Engineering's graduation rate is 96%.
"https://engineering.virginia.edu/about-our-school/facts-glance" |
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VT Engineering 4yr graduation rate is less than 75% per VT web site:
"https://udc.vt.edu/irdata/data/students/retention_graduation/rg_chart" Eyeballing the graph, 4yr graduation rate in engineering is maybe 60% or 67%... Need to filter the website for College of Engineering, the latest data (2021-2024), and freshmen entering seeking 4yr degree (not transfers or seeking 2yr degree). |
lol what? Does premed major and subjects have unknown and different answers? Business finance classes are different school to school...economic principles different per school? Nonsense. Engineering rank matters more than any major. Maker spaces, research opportunities/money for research, top notch professors and instruction all matter!!! |
Many pre-meds have their GPA driven by their humanities classes, not by their science classes. Ditto for business and finance majors. Economics, excepting specific Quantitative Economics, also is this way. Even students at a liberal arts college on a BS Physics track take more non-quantitative courses than Physics and Math. Separately, Pre-med is not a major and courses taken do vary from student to student (the number of common classes, such as PChem, for a Premed are many fewer than their non-required classes). By contrast, engineering students are overwhelmingly taking engineering classes (and take few non-quantitative or humanities classes). ABET even outlines which topics need to be covered in which year for each degree. The circumstances are very different between engineering and any of those other degrees PP mentioned. |
| We are looking for engineering programs for my DC too. My DH is an engineer and has a PhD in EE. He went to a well known competitive private university that’s highly regarded for engineering. He hated it. He hated his classmates. It was a total grind. He wants DC to go to a state university for engineering. Because engineering programs are accredited, they all teach roughly the same thing (same classes). The difference is the amount of homework assigned and the culture of your classmates/program. He feels more homework doesn’t lead to better engineers. |