Brown Tufts, BU and Dartmouth have strong ENGR programs. Yale is on the rise. I don't think U Chicago actually has engineering unless you count relationship w/ molecular ENGR. So, to put all these schools together on a list and say "weak" just belies your lack of knowledge of the various schools. |
Actually, engineering at these schools is not thought to be at the top according to peer assessments. The rating of these schools demonstrates this fact. Brown - 37 Yale - 37 Tufts - 61 BU - 46 Dartmouth - 53 NYU - 61 Texas A&M, Arizona State, and UC-Boulder have better engineering programs than the entire list. |
There was a time SV would take any engineer trained brain. Still the case? |
Dartmouth is not good for undergrad engineering. The only ABET accredited program they have is "general engineering" |
OK Dartmouth is on par UMass. |
| ^ according to USNWR, but UMass has many strong specialty programs. |
MIT was also a land grant institution. |
Yale may be weak, but this is where massive endowments can move the needle relatively quickly. Yale is investing tons of $$$s into their STEM programs. It takes time, but they recognize the issue and I wouldn’t be surprised if it is highly rated within a decade. |
FYI, that "undergrad" list you linked is solely based on peer assessment reviews, which is rather bogus methodology according to many. The first link for the best engineering schools is based on much more comprehensive data. |
WTF BC just started an engineering department It's not just weak. It's shit. |
+1 The first list (https://www.usnews.com/best-graduate-schools/top-engineering-schools/eng-rankings) provides the best information, given that it is based on research activity, faculty resources, academic achievements of entering students, and assessments by other engineering schools and employers. The undergrad list is only based on peer assessment reviews. WTH? |
| If you go to an Ivy League school, you are signing up for a liberal arts education. |
I would avoid the schools that have relatively recently developed (as compared to the established engineering programs) engineering programs, OP. Since you asked. |
WSJ rates Harvard #1 for top colleges for engineering salaries. https://www.wsj.com/articles/top-colleges-high-paying-jobs-engineering-7be5d8f2 RANK COLLEGE ANNUAL SALARY PREMIUM ENGINEERING % OF GRADUATES AVERAGE YEARLY SALARY 2019-2020 AVERAGE NET PRICE 1 Harvard University $39,945 1.79% $130,119 $18,037 2 Stanford University $34,385 6.57% $124,559 $20,023 3 California Institute of Technology $25,252 13.63% $115,426 $26,591 4 Princeton University $24,995 3.97% $115,169 $18,685 5 Brown University $24,553 3.02% $114,727 $27,659 6 University of Pennsylvania $20,477 2.94% $110,651 $24,167 7 Massachusetts Institute of Technology $19,576 15.00% $109,750 $19,998 8 Columbia University in the City of New York $17,736 4.06% $107,910 $22,126 9 Dartmouth College $16,256 2.98% $106,430 $24,525 10 Santa Clara University $15,883 5.62% $106,057 $48,284 |
Yeah, but this is always misleading. As an example, I believe less than 1/2 of UPenn engineering grads actually work in engineering. The rest work for hedge funds, consulting, Ibanking, VC, etc. I assume Harvard and many of these other schools are the same/similar. |