| What about BU? It's in a city. |
McGill's engineering faculty is excellent and Montreal is an amazing place to be a student. Just be sure your son actually will buckle down and do the work amid all the distractions, because the program is no joke and McGill won't either hold his hand or hesitate to flunk him out. |
|
Another vote for Mines! It’s on the small
Side, but close to Denver in the cute town of Golden. Our child has had a great experience and was given a scholarship with his high SAT and minimal extracurriculars. |
Golden Co. is nice especially if you are the outdoorsy type. |
FWIW, I know a bright, talented kid with similar stats who was accepted to several highly ranked engineering programs but chose Cincinnati because they gave him a ton of money. he was also impressed by their co-op program. Might be worth looking into. |
Thank you for this! |
| I second some of the suggestions above - Lehigh, Santa Clara, BU, CU Boulder and then would suggest San Diego State, UC Irvine, UCSD, UC Santa Barbara, University of Washington, Waterloo, UBC Vancouver |
|
University of Toronto (St George) campus is integrated into downtown Toronto. It has a "residential college" system that is analogous to the houses at Yale or Harvard.
UBC is not very urban, it is suburban and bot near downtown. U. Guelph (Canada) and U. Waterloo and McGill also might be options. All of these are good universities. Not sure if all offer engineering - at least UT, UBC, and Waterloo do offer engineering. |
|
I can't believe this list is helpful at this point. We have U. Guelph mentioned but not U. Delaware when OP lives in MD.
As others mentioned, Pitt and Minnesota work well as rolling admission options rather than traditional safeties Both are large, urban schools with strong engineering programs that provide early decisions. Consider visiting Lehigh or Case Western to experience smaller engineering-focused environments. This can help determine if that size is your kid’s jam. Unless a school has strong national recruiting or your student wants to work in that region post graduation, I'd focus on schools closer to home or school with national recruiting footprints. Since your student prefers large universities, state flagship engineering programs are worth prioritizing. They typically offer the most diverse engineering specialties and better resources. Schools like SMU, Villanova, or GW may be excellent institutions overall, but their engineering programs aren't as well developed. Only include them if your student has strong non-academic reasons for interest. |
Many US tech firms recruit at all of the above for STEM graduates -- and have done for decades now. |
| If you decide to look at private schools Bucknell, Lehigh and Union have amazing engineering with the bonus of smaller classes. They all have excellent career outcomes. |
| Have a very city-loving city slicker son at Purdue and he absolutely LOVES it. Campus is always busy and bustling and downtown Lafayette/west Lafayette is quite charming with pretty much everything a college kid could want (coffee shops, cute restaurants, a few bars)… He committed within 2 hours of our first visit because he said it just felt right - It was big and busy enough to give him a city feel (but in reality he was on a super safe campus), he did not have to deal with big city life while in school (he wants to save that for after graduation), he frequently goes to Indy (drives himself or takes the shuttle) and Chicago (2 hours) for real city fixes. Driving there may feel like you are in a children of the corn movie but once you hit the edges of campus most people are shocked at how lively and “non-rural” it is. Oh… and top notch engineering program recognized world wide. He already has 4 job offers and spent this past summer in San Fran and made bank. |
| What about NYU Tandon as a safety? |
But none are large urban schools |
+1 They’re pretty good at engineering as well. If it’s ED, it might have a good chance? |