Most engineers from Ivy’s end up going into finance or hedge funds. |
Heard the same from a scientist friend at a research facility. |
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Top Feeders to Elite Tech Companies for Engineering (Apple, SpaceX, NASA, etc.): https://www.collegetransitions.com/dataverse/top-feeders-engineering
1. Carnegie Mellon 2. Columbia 3. Caltech 4. MIT 5. Georgia Tech 6. University of Southern California 7. Stanford 8. Olin 9. Harvey Mudd 10. Rice 11. Northeastern 12. Duke 13. Cornell 14. Santa Clara University 15. UPenn 16. Princeton 17. Harvard 18. Rose Hulman 19. Johns Hopkins 20. Cooper Union |
+1 THIS. |
By total employed: USC GA Tech CMU Berkeley University of Washington UCSD UIUC UCLA Irvina Northeastern Purdue Michigan UT Austin In short, big state schools send LOTS of kids to top employers. |
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How the heck Northeastern gamed this?
Bribed the employers to hire its students? |
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and who the heck said USC is a party school for rich kids?
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How did Cmu and Columbia beat out cal tech and mit? |
Probably little more from CalTech and MIT to grad schools. |
Also Caltech is tiny and MIT is very pro entrepreneurship/weird carreer paths. Plenty go to walk street or grad school or like to work at Cirque de Soliel for a while before circling back to work normal engineering jobs. |
CMU's CS program is one of, if not the best in the country. Consistently ranked #1 or 2 across all kinds of rankings. heck, the school's prestige is built on CS. Columbia because of NYC and the school is more pre-professional than Caltech for sure. DS knows kids who transferred from Caltech to Columbia because they wanted to... guess what, get rich and do finance. Lots of Columbia engineering students do fintech or go into trading. DE Shaw himself was a CS professor at Columbia at one point. Also many tech companies have regional offices. Can't beat the location. |