How could they be instate for two states? Something fishy there. |
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Targets:
Michigan (in state) Purdue Wisconsin Reach: Cornell Northwestern MIT |
It's reciprocity. "The Minnesota/Wisconsin Reciprocity Agreement allows Wisconsin residents to attend Minnesota public universities at in-state tuition rates." https://www.wisconsin.edu/reciprocity/ |
Same except for the CA schools |
Delaware outranks all of those in chemical |
Lots of kids change major and/or drop from engineering. Good idea to go to best school |
Great that your kid got in, but VT engineering really isn’t a “safety” for anyone. Every year when decisions come out you see high stats kids rejected, and mediocre kids accepted. Just my observation, my kids didn’t apply to VT. |
We are Minnesota residents, but reciprocity agreement considers us in state for both tuition (we pay higher MN tuition vs WI one) and for admission at Wisconsin schools. |
Minnesotans are also considered in-province in Manitoba, Canada which is a nice option. Can attend for under $17500 a year all inclusive, but the higher ranked programs in Canada are elsewhere. |
No one has even mentioned Delaware. DP |
“Mediocre”? Sorry, no. Some kids are accepted and others are not. Mediocre is definitely not accepted. DP |
| seeing Wisconsin often in these - is that a good school for engineering? |
Yes, it's not top tier but certainly above average. |
| DC (mech e) is applying to many of these. Plus Rose Hulman which I don’t see listed yet |
Yes. Engineering is such a competitive major that even the best students have Wisconsin somewhere in the mix. It's a perfectly good option. Especially since so many public universities for engineering - Georgia Tech, Illinois, Michigan, Purdue, Texas - basically require Ivy stats these days. |