If you can't handle being around engineers, then you shouldn't be an engineer. You will work with them your whole career if you work in the field.Anonymous wrote:One problem with small colleges that offer engineering is that they are filled with engineers. While this might seem like a good thing there can be large gender imbalances and odd diversity. Engineers are known for, and often pride themselves on, their lack of interpersonal skills and poor hygiene.
Anonymous wrote:One problem with small colleges that offer engineering is that they are filled with engineers. While this might seem like a good thing there can be large gender imbalances and odd diversity. Engineers are known for, and often pride themselves on, their lack of interpersonal skills and poor hygiene.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It can be really helpful to go to an engineering school with a culture of group work and collaboration. This can be a big school or a small school, but having a good study group makes a huge difference. Engineering classes are hard and you want to be able to work collaboratively to learn the material. I taught at UCLA and the engineering students really struggled because they were so dispersed amongst liberal studies majors that they didn't find each other. It's also hard to be the one studying on a Thursday night when all of your English-major friends are going drinking. I'm so sure all schools are so disaggregated, but I really felt bad for those engineering students. Lots dropped out of the program.
You also want a school with professors who have office hours that are open to students and TAs who speak good English.
I'd look at Clarkson University, RPI and Case Western.
I went to Va Tech, and I think bolded above was probably true there as well. And my niece at U MD said the same thing. But many of the engineering schools are part of a large univ so I'm not sure where else it would be much different except some place like MIT or Cal.
I've heard good things from an NC State grad and a Purdue grad, but they have been out of school long enough that you'd want to talk to someone with a more recent experience.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It can be really helpful to go to an engineering school with a culture of group work and collaboration. This can be a big school or a small school, but having a good study group makes a huge difference. Engineering classes are hard and you want to be able to work collaboratively to learn the material. I taught at UCLA and the engineering students really struggled because they were so dispersed amongst liberal studies majors that they didn't find each other. It's also hard to be the one studying on a Thursday night when all of your English-major friends are going drinking. I'm so sure all schools are so disaggregated, but I really felt bad for those engineering students. Lots dropped out of the program.
You also want a school with professors who have office hours that are open to students and TAs who speak good English.
I'd look at Clarkson University, RPI and Case Western.
I went to Va Tech, and I think bolded above was probably true there as well. And my niece at UMD said the same thing. But many of the engineering schools are part of a large univ so I'm not sure where else it would be much different except some place like MIT or Cal.
Anonymous wrote:It can be really helpful to go to an engineering school with a culture of group work and collaboration. This can be a big school or a small school, but having a good study group makes a huge difference. Engineering classes are hard and you want to be able to work collaboratively to learn the material. I taught at UCLA and the engineering students really struggled because they were so dispersed amongst liberal studies majors that they didn't find each other. It's also hard to be the one studying on a Thursday night when all of your English-major friends are going drinking. I'm so sure all schools are so disaggregated, but I really felt bad for those engineering students. Lots dropped out of the program.
You also want a school with professors who have office hours that are open to students and TAs who speak good English.
I'd look at Clarkson University, RPI and Case Western.