All my ivy kid’s engineering friends spent thanksgiving to Feb 1 applying to all the big ones and most have either secured backup research positions or applied to “backup” ones that admit 30-40% of applicants. They all had paid engineering jobs after sophomore year; this year has proven easier so far with fewer cancellations and cuts |
+1 |
In DC’s experience, being at a top 5 program has yielded better results than friends at other schools. DC did a coop for first semester sophomore year, then an internship summer before junior year. DC was asked back by both companies for this summer. DC also made it to second interviews at some very selective internships, based upon his school and prior internship experience. Many of DC’s friends do not have any internship experience. The career fairs at their schools have not resulted in summer jobs. These are students at Pitt, PSU, Auburn, VT, and GMU. I recommend considering coop opportunity. It may push graduation back a term, but students gain valuable experience and industry connections. DC is in various consulting and engineering specific groups at his school. Many of his peers have gained internships through the group's connections with industry. This is another way I think top ranked programs out perform lower ranked schools. |
Research job last summer which was fine. Her engineering friends did not all have internships last year- a lot of regular kid jobs. Kid has not mentioned it, so likely not a big cause of stress in her friend group. I think they will all be OK. |
+1 And apply to a lot, like 100+. I think DC started applying at the end of summer, even. -parent of another CS major kid at a state flagship with five internship offers |
At the top privates with engineering(MIT, stanford, ivies, hopkins, CMU) coops are NOT needed. They all graduate in 4 yrs unless they choose a 4+1 masters. The students almost always get internships after sophomore year, sometimes freshman. By junior year they have much more experience than a coop would give. Research or startup participation is available on campus through professors and their industry contacts. The students get into Top-20 phD easily or are hired by industry and top tech consulting if they choose that route. MBB recruit on campus and target the engineering students, even this cycle. |
Brown is not great for engineering. For students who want ivies plus engineering you need Princeton Penn Harvard or Columbia, plus Cornell if one is ok with more of a large cohort/public feel. Yale is up and coming and has invested $ in it the past 10 yrs. Brown and Dartmouth do not have the world class research base needed to get the top professors and industry connections. |
| I am not the poster but wanted to say no one asked for your opinion about Brown. It offers accredited programs and that is what is most important when it comes to engineering. Brown has a very small engineering school so its metrics are impacted when it comes to rankings etc. |
| FYI, if you go on the MIT subreddit there are students recent grads having trouble finding jobs so there is that too. |
| I'm the parent of the Brown student- yes, we realized it wasn't the most highly ranked program when he applied, but did figure that it was accredited and he'd be fine even if he decided to switch majors. He also looked at Penn, MIT, JHU, CMU but fell in love w/Brown and decided to ED. Sometimes I wonder if its ranking in engineering has been a barrier to securing an internship, but on the other hand, he's having an absolutely amazing college experience and has been very involved in clubs, a club sport and was able to study abroad. So hopefully it will all work out, no guarantees in life but I do feel confident he'll end up gainfully employed. And he loves his department and professors. |
|
My kid is Comp Eng at Brown, also having a very difficult time finding a summer internship. Has sent out tons of apps, that's about all he did over Christmas break. Still nothing, planning on doing research over the summer unless something pops up. It's tough out there
Brown is not great for engineering. For students who want ivies plus engineering you need Princeton Penn Harvard or Columbia, plus Cornell if one is ok with more of a large cohort/public feel. Yale is up and coming and has invested $ in it the past 10 yrs. Brown and Dartmouth do not have the world class research base needed to get the top professors and industry connections. To the clown that responded to the initial post above saying Cornell engineering has a "large cohort/public feel" ... Cornell is easily the best engineering school in the Ivy league. The engineering school is not public, but I'll point out that many great engineering schools are public, for example Michigan, Illinois and Virginia Tech. |
Accredited is not most important from top schools,.like CIT, not accredited. |
This means that the Top 5 Engineering schools did even better. |
Stanford is not ABET accredited for CompE, but the name carries more weight. |
|
Kid just texted that she wants to be home this summer and is going to apply for a regular kid job.
I am glad. There are so many years of work and responsibility as an adult. I think it is OK to have summers with less stress before you go out into the world. |