The college ADMISSION aspect is definitely overrated; The college PREPARATION aspect is definitely not. |
GT is a hard admit and they price themselves out of the market at TJ. If you can get into GT from TJ, you can probably get in somewhere that looks better on a bumper sticker. |
My bet it is because GT is a tough admit OOS, and if admitted to GT there are likely Ivy or other T20 options. And according tother posters absolute ranking of the college prevails in the decision making process. |
GT is almost impossible out of state even for the highest of stats. There are only so many spots for thousands of apps. For CS it's probably around 3 percent OOS, for engineering OOS probably looking at 6%. For Overall OOS it's 9%. |
Only provincial strivers would obsess over rankings like that. |
doubtful |
If TJ students are as smart as they claim to be it shouldn’t matter where they go to college. |
This is why the recent top CS/Eng kids we know from TJ and a known top private did not pick GT. They got in to Stanford, Penn, UCB EECS, or Princeton and picked there. The ones who picked GT were WL at the better-bumper-sticker schools. |
100% true. The ones who get into CMU for CS only pick it if they do not get in to MIT or good ivies/stanford. CMU likes TJ top kids. |
Who cares about this anecdote. GT is the top pick for many in engineering outside of say MIT and Stanford. Everyone is different. GT turns down many that get into the schools you mentioned above as well. I also have those anecdotal stories I could share but what’s the point there. Not to mention the value and ROI for an engineering degree for GT is amazing |
Is ROI for GT engineering netter than Berkeley or Michigan or Texas, etc.? |
My kid trying to decide between Georgia Tech and Northwestern for engineering right now. Thoughts? Anyone with experience |
True for almost all college students. |
Northwestern. |
No. it is similar to Mich and UT and is not as good as UCB. |