| What about a liberal arts school with a 3/2 program? Hope College in Holland, Michigan had (probably still has) a 3/2 program with University of Michigan - 3 years of undergrad at Hope then 2 years of grad school at Michigan. |
This response and the Smith / Cal Poly response were excellent. Also worth keeping in mind, depending on your daughter's grades and/or test scores, she might be able to secure admission to an honors program at a "second rate" public university with a strong engineering program (somewhere like Iowa or Iowa State, e.g.), which could supply the connected feeling she needs while pushing through the first couple years of largely lecture classes. |
keep in mind, even large public unis, when you get to 3rd year, classes are very small and you will get to know the professors very well. |
| I'd second Rose-Hulman |
Some other examples here: NC State; Arizona State; Oregon State; University of Utah; University of Houston |
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Swarthmore
Kenyon Dartmouth Harvey Mudd Caltech |
None of those makes sense given OP's comment about DD "Her grades are pretty average; she's smart, but she won't get into the most selective schools." |
In that case - Union and Bucknell are the only ones that come to mind. I wouldn't recommend a big university for OP's kid. I think she would feel lost and give up. |
And Kenyon doesn't even offer an engineering major. One alternative, though, might be to major in physics (or chem, or bio -- depending on interests) at a LAC and then do a one-year master's in engineering at a university. |
Bucknell has several strong engineering departments |
| If her grades are average, she may want to go to NOVA for a year or two years then transfer to Smith. Otherwise, Smith probably won't take her given what you said about grades. |
I went to Bucknell. Was not an engineering major, but the program is very strong there. There's an entire college of engineering. |
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Lafayette
Trinity College in Hartford, CT |
average ACT for Rose-Hulman is 29, for RPI 29, so I think they are comparable... Both very gender-imbalanced though, as is WPI My stem DD wanted a less testosterone-imbued school |