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http://www.academyofinventors.com/pdf/NAI-IPO-Top-100-Universities-2013.pdf
The National Academy of Inventors (NAI) and the Intellectual Property Owners Association (IPO) released the list of the Top 100 Worldwide Universities Granted U.S. Utility Patents in 2013. The list correlates with leadership in university research. |
| These are great universities to go to for graduate school, but YMMV for undergrad. A lot of top tier research universities are notorious for not focusing on undergraduate education, especially in STEM where hot shot professors are under a lot of pressure to secure grant funding. |
So true. The "highly sought after" brand name schools don't necessarily deliver a good education for an undergrad. |
| Yet undergrads are often able to secure research assistant positions that make it easier to secure a grad school position. |
What is this acronym? |
| I can assure you that MIT, Stanford, UT, etc. are excellent places to go to get an undergraduate STEM education. Further, when getting a job, it's good to have a school with a lot of name recognition. I went to a Top 10 school on this list, and it was a discussion point in all interviews. Plus, the alumni network is strong and helpful! |
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I did my graduate work at UT, and my undergraduate work at a SLAC. I think my classes were uniformly more rigorous at the SLAC and fewer people were lost in the shuffle. Although we didn't have top notch resources for research, we had collaborating labs, and I had a lot more independence in my undergraduate research than the average student who gets involved in research at UT. My senior year was a lot like grad school. I mentored several undergraduates at UT and spent several semesters as a TA, so I'm not talking out of my ass. MIT and Stanford have the advantage of having a really strong peer group; in fact my good friend went to MIT for undergrad and the level at which the introductory courses went into much greater depth (by a huge margin) than either my classes at my SLAC or the courses I TAed for at UT. Unless we are talking about grad classes or deans scholar classes, a lot of courses (even junior level courses) taught in my subject (a STEM subject) were kind of high school part 2 at UT.
There were a few exceptional students who took advantage of the resources of being at a large research university and had independence in labs, took grad classes, took advantage of various programs oriented toward undergraduates, etc. They were the exception, but some of them had phenomenal experiences. I think you get a lot more close mentoring at a SLAC, and some places like Reed, Harvey Mudd, Carleton, etc. have very strong undergraduate STEM programs. Also even if you are not at a research powerhouse, there are programs like NSF-REUs so you can get great lab experiences. You are also more likely to do an undergraduate thesis in a smaller program unless you are in an honors program. You are also more likely to get exposed to more in depth seminar classes as an undergraduate. I don't think it is always so cut and dry about where the better place to get an undergraduate STEM education is--a large top notch research university versus other environments. I think my liberal arts education was great, and the alumni network, although small, is exceedingly loyal and helpful. DH went to a regional school, and did exceptionally well, had summer research experiences, and won national awards. I also know a number of people who were in my graduate program who did well despite coming from relative "no name" schools (everyone had research experience with professors and often through REUs and other summer internships). You don't have to go to Stanford or MIT or UT or Michigan to get in a lab as an undergrad--and getting closer mentorship and the sort of relationships that lend themselves to excellent letters of recommendations are much much harder at a large flagship state school. |
| Carnegie Mellon |
Your mileage may vary. |
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MIT
Cal Tech Mich GT UMD Ill Wisconsin Cal Davis Texas Stanford Carnegie Mellon Pitt |
Cal Davis? For farming tech? UCSD is far stronger as is UCLA. |
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Stanford
Harvard MIT UC Berkeley Carnegie Mellon UT-Austin Caltech Michigan Georgia Tech Cornell Princeton Columbia Rensselaer Worcester UIllinois - Urbana-Champaign Harvey Mudd Virginia Tech Purdue Texas A&M |
UT = Texas? |
I question these schools. |
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Cornell is building a tech school. It already has a fine engineering school in Ithaca, NY. So at least in the future it should be considered a top STEM school.
https://tech.cornell.edu/future-campus/ |