Interesting position Went through this with DC last year. Tons of offers from D3 schools. But wanted to study engineering and all the good programs are D1 schools. For schools like MIT and Caltech, I don't think the athlete angle makes too much of a difference. Elsewhere, a coach's note will help on the margins If this is a genuine top student that wants to compete and study engineering: Cornell Rice Duke Northwestern Wouldn't bother with out of sate publics, particularly the UCs. And Maryland is a very good school for engineering Also, D1 sports are hardcore. Not for everyone |
None of those schools have the sport. |
Cornell has a strong engineering program and Rice is decent. Duke and Northwestern, not so much |
Right, and he might apply to one or all of them. But right now he's not deciding where to apply, he's deciding which coaches to reach out to, and since none of them have a coach in his sport, they aren't on the list. |
And of course you’re totally eliminating the Midwest |
PP you are responding to. Yes, I had USC bolded then took it off. I think USC and UMD are neck-and-neck. |
Cornell, Rice, and Northwestern are all strong in Engineering. It’s Duke that is the outliercherr |
| *outlier here |
We can agree to disagree re. Northwestern. Opinions vary obviously. |
| A sport and engineering, expect for it to take 5 years to graduate. |
I'd be impressed if a kid can complete in 5. Even more impressive if the same kid can do it GPA higher than 3.3 |
There are a couple schools in Illinois, but they don't have engineering, so I didn't list them. |
+1. Engg very hard even for smart kids. |
Northwestern #13 Duke #19 https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rankings/engineering-doctorate Actually it’s Rice that is weakest here at #25 |
| Fencing |