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For engineering programs, ask ANY college about their 4yr graduation rate *with an engineering degree* of students who started in engineering.
Really top programs (like MIT) and some mid-tier programs have a 90+% graduation rate with an engineering degree. Some other programs have a lower graduation rate. VT is roughly 70-75% (calculated by dividing the graduating class size by number of students entering engineering 4 yrs earlier). ABET seems to say the national average 4yr graduation rate with an engineering degree is around 2/3 - or 67%. |
| in at Purdue, VTech and UMich, deferred UT AUstin , rejected Princeton, waiting on the others |
South campus is actually hopping. My DC lived near north campus second year; third year went near south campus. Very different vibe. |
My son picked it because of a lot of different factors. His interest in majoring in engineering came on somewhat late in the whole application process so he also applied into business programs. As the process went along, he became more sure about engin. Purdue was not on his list at the beginning, but he added it. Once he got in, he visited it and just loved everything about it. He prob chose it over 5 or more other schools (biz programs had been ruled out) and just had the feeling that’s where he belonged. He was definitely impressed with ranking, whether people value it or not. So it’s really a difficult question when people ask “which one?” You lay out all the pros and cons and you go with that gut feeling. He loves it, almost 3 full years in. Junior year first semester almost did him in, but he got through it . He’s been in a fraternity and that’s been very fun for him as well. Hope that helps!
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Source for MIT's engineering-specific 4-year grad rate? Overall it's more like 83% (US News/MIT CDS), 6-year mid-90s—better than most publics, but expected from a tiny elite private that cherry-picks the brightest kids. National engineering 4-year average is 33% (ASEE data). Hopefully you don't work with numbers, because inflating MIT to 90%+ while lowballing the national average is some sloppy math. |
Wouldn’t say it turned him on. And in fact, he’s on south campus with engineering classes on north. But he can bike easily rather than waiting for bus. He’s very happy with UMd. (Full ride helped as well). |
From your note, it sounds like ASEE data is different than the ABET data. PP was clear they were using ABET data. |
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Some MIT data from MIT:
"https://ir.mit.edu/projects/more-student-data/" |
Yeah that “full ride” thing you that you neglected to mention earlier. |
I don't understand your post too well but if you mean there's a strip mall city near U of M North Campus, that's because it's like a small version of Rockville Pike with grocery stores, apartments, and restaurants. People have to get food somewhere if they don't live on campus. |
Anything above 67% is perfectly fine. |
+1 That person constantly posts the same things. They are a booster for certain school that isn't ranked well in engineering but manages to have a high graduation rate anyway. It's kind of funny. |