Anonymous wrote:I don’t know how your daughter might feel about attending a single-sex school, but Smith College has a great engineering program and an acceptance rate of 30%. I don’t know if it would be a safety, but 1/4 of the kids admitted have an SAT score that is less than 1370. Maybe worth looking into?
https://www.smith.edu/academics/engineering
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s so hard to get into any engineering school now. Unless it’s so bad that you wouldn’t want to attend. DD was accepted by Cal Poly SLO. She applied thinking it was a safety. It turned out that SLO’s acceptance rate was only 8%.
oof someone didn't do their hw on SLO. Yea, SLO is hard to get into for eng/cs.
I think you both have it wrong. Cals are for California residents. They are very hard to get into from OOS . But it still comes down to - do you really want to do engineering at Cal Poly SLO?
Anonymous wrote:gettysburg, lafayette, drexel, wentworth...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UMBC
Towson
VA Tech
ODU
private:
Clarkson
Lehigh
Bates
BTW, lots of students think they want to do engineering but then find out they don't. There is something called information systems that is the business side of science (computer science though) and it's a good alternate to engineering if it does not work out.
VA Tech engineering is extremely difficult to get into. Not a safety for even high stat students.
Her stats are in the green-ish (60/40) for our school for VA Tech. My son got in with a little bit higher GPA but lower test score.
That honestly shocks me. My son has a 3.7 UW and a 35 ACT (36 on Science, 35 math for a 36 STEM composite score) and I was under the impression that he has almost 0 chance of getting into VT engineering.
Anonymous wrote:I think some people on this thread are assuming that if they know kids who had those scores and didn’t get in that means NO kids with those scores got in, and certainly none with lower scores.
That’s just not true. An application package depends on many factors, including the number of kids applying to any particular engineering program (there is usually more than one) at that school that year. It may depend on things not directly related to classes and scores also. People who have kids with a 3.5 and a 1200 aren’t bragging to people who think a 1500 is the score required to go to any school in any subject.