Anyone can list elite schools. She's not going to any of these. |
| How about Colorado School of Mines? |
| Olin |
This. |
| Case Western in Cleveland? |
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I think we need more info to help. If her grades are average but has higher math scores, she will obviously have some more choices. Many of the schools listed are excellent schools that she will not get into without proven math ability. What level math is she in? What level science classes? Has she taken ap physics and ap chem?
Stevens Rpi Wpi Union Rochester intstitute of tech Olin Rose hulman Are excellent but competitive. For many of these schools, the math scores are outstanding, but the English brings down the test score average. These are difficult schools and I second the recommendation to maybe try nova for a year and then see about transferring. Bucknell, Lafayette, Lehigh, Villanova all have good and small engineering but like the above list, are hard to get into. The thing that might be good about these schools is that if she doesn't like engineering, she has other majors to pursue. But again, average grades will not gain you entry. FIT might be a good place to start. I have also heard good things about George Mason but not so sure about admission difficulty. |
| I know someone who went to bucknell engineering a few years ago. She really loved it and it had a special initiative for female engineering students. She went on to a top phd program. I think her grades were better than average. Also know someone that went to Union for engineering and loved it. Don't really know how hard it is to get into either, but engineering tends to be a niche market. Being female will be a huge plus--still aren't many girls going into engineering. Also know people who liked RPI but I think that has less of a liberal arts feel and more of a techie feel. |
| Nova for a year would be a throwaway year. She wouldn't be getting the necessary prerequisites for the engineering program and would still likely need 4 additional years to graduate. Many engineering programs are very picky about what can transfer in. |
| I grew up near WPI and had several female HS friends attend. They were "normal" people - had interests well beyond engineering - and they enjoyed it and have done well professionally. It's a pretty social school, or at least it was a billion years ago - I seem to recall fraternity parties? It has a nice reputation for strong academics in MA, not sure how that translates. |
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Colorado schools of mines
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| OLIN - use to be free |
Good suggestion! Tufts also has good engineering but competitive. Might be easier for girls to get into college of engineering, not sure. |
My DS considered this, but found that there were very few programs that offered this option at the graduate level, and even the few that exist are pretty limited in scope. Engineers and engineering profs he consulted all encouraged him to get an undergrad engineering degree, rather than a physics degree. |
| OP, what year is your daughter? Has she done a summer engineering program for high school students? Those can be very helpful, both in terms of helping students test out their interest in engineering, and in terms of demonstrating ability for purposes of college applications. |
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Definitely worth looking at 3/2 engineering programs. Three schools that are known for being on the receiving end (the 2 year engineering part) are Washington U in St Louis, Columbia University, and Penn State. Many of affiliated schools (the 3 year part) are solid but not especially selective LACs. (I went to one, and majored in physics which had significant course overlap with 3/2 engineering students.)
http://undergrad.admissions.columbia.edu/sites/default/files/combined_plan_affiliates_2014-15_by_state.pdf https://engineering.wustl.edu/prospective-students/dual-degree/Pages/affiliated-schools.aspx http://www.engr.psu.edu/students/dual-degree-program.aspx |