Caltech, MIT, Columbia, Dartmouth dual degree programs with liberal arts schools are all competitive and expensive. |
Yes Also check out Stevens in NJ |
They may be trying to change to NU from NEU, but ask most people who are familiar with Top 50 universities, and NU is Northwestern. |
She doesn't have NU on her list. |
Paying 2 years at Columbia better than paying for four
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Too bad because Purdue is huge. You should take her to visit |
I don't know how the ACT converts to SAT, but my DD, interested in engineering with a 1390ish SAT (I think 710 in math?), was accepted to Union, WPI, Lafayette, U of Rochester & Pitt Engineering. She ended up choosing a larger state school, but it seems the engineering schools like female candidates. FWIW we were also full pay, but DD got fabulous merit aid from WPI and Union. |
That's if a student can get in. Columbia, or Caltech, or MIT is not guaranteed. Three years of hard work - and a rejection. It's heartbreaking. Go read college confidential stories of students who were rejected. |
She does. Look again. |
True, but OP said she might want to switch to liberal arts, so the pure engineering schools would leave her stuck. |
| Gmu has an xlnt engineering department |
| Stevens Institute of Technology (Hoboken NJ). Not sure what she would think of a 70/30, M/F ratio? View of Manhattan. Private but I believe generous with financial. Bet they would GLADLY accept your DD. |
Except the 2 yrs at SUNY looks like 2 years at CC. They probably gave out As like candy. |
Op, I say this as an engineer but engineering is hard. Some would even say it's very hard. If your daughter's top test score is 32, I'd select a school that offers variety of majors in case she changes her mind. Most kids usually change majors anyway. Don't be single focused. |
Northeastern has been NU since at least the 70's. But let's not make this thread about that, shall we? Since it is obviously one of the schools that DCUM likes to go off on. |