This is good to know. I was under the assumption that most are, but perhaps not and great idea to check. |
If you don’t mind sharing, where all did he get in? What kind of engineering? |
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My DS had similar stats from a public school. But also exceptional ECs and national awards. Was interested in mechanical engineering. Considered:
UMD Cornell Rice MIT Northwestern USC McGill Michigan Georgia Tech Purdue |
No, but it does have CS. |
Rice, VT, GT and U Michigan are best in engineering in this list. UMD depends; going down for a while so not sure. Hopkins could be ok |
I am interested to learn what you mean by “best”. Best teaching? Best research? Best students? Best facilities? How did you gauge? How did you know the relative merits? As you know, US News rates engineering programs solely by what faculty and deans at other schools think of other programs. That methodology sounds a lot like a popularity contest (though it admittedly could become self-fulfilling). |
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Reaches: This list is probably obvious already.
Target: (make sure to show demonstrated interest and visit or you will be yield protected/denied -Case Western) -Purdue - Honors program - Lehigh Safety: (make sure to show demonstrated interest and visit or you will be yield protected/denied - RIT -RPI U Boulder |
It is a "popularity contest". Where the more well known STEM schools will continue to be highly ranked, because who hasn't heard of MIT/Cal Tech versus a smaller lesser known nationally school (think WPI/RPI/Clarkson/etc). That is why rankings rarely truly matter |
| RIT, RPI, and WPI are all very good less heralded E schools. Ditto for GMU and UMBC. I would very happily hire an ECE from any of those. |