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Reply to "How are you supposed to get into college for engineering now?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Purdue EA decisions recently came out, and it was shocking how selective they were. I seen kids with straight As, a 1570+ SAT, and strong extracurriculars in research, building model rockets, Eagle Scout, varsity team captains, and more who got denied. Not even deferred. Just flat out denied. It is just so frustrating that here in NOVA, just getting into these extracurriculars and being top of the class is ridiculously hard. Yet, many of these stop students can't get even get into Purdue. I honestly don't know what Ivy Leagues or schools like Berkeley and Michigan are looking for. [/quote] Go to a less selective school for engineering. Problem solved.[/quote] One thing about engineering is that there are plenty of less selective schools where you can get an excellentr engineering education.[/quote] Non-engineer here. I was under the impression it does not matter much where you go for engineering as long as it it ABET accredited. Is that true?[/quote] Depends on engineering. I recruit BS engineers. Some schools don't do enough math and physics for EE and computer engineering. Some aerospace programs are not rigorous enough in my opinion as well. Purdue is amazing so are UMD, Michigan and many others. You have to look at the requirements for the major and how much math there is and also what the options are for 400 levels as in some schools there are easy senior project courses but challenging one in others. [/quote] +1 ABET is the minimum needed but to maximize top recruitment in Engineering from the best companies and also if the kid has interest in start-up/emerging tech culture, you need certain classes: a lot of math and physics already accomplished by soph year is a leg up in getting paid summer E jobs, which then puts one ahead for jobs after junior year. [b] The weaker schools are not targets[/b] for high paying E jobs because mostly because the students are less prepared[/quote] True, but it is a small sliver of E-jobs at the very top of the market that preferentially target MIT/Ivy/CMU/UCB level over Purdue. Purdue does better than the vast majority of E-schools looking at jobs after BSE. Not being a target for the super elite tech jobs is not important for most undergrads. Similar issue with those who always point out on DCUM that you cannot go into top finance(quant ala Jane Street, 2Sig) or top consulting(MBB) from non-ivy+. So? There remain plenty of regional finance and consulting careers that pay very well and hire from SMU, Fordham, UMD. Most grads do not care about the tip-top segments of the job market. [/quote]
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