Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Been a practicing engineer for the past 10 years. Besides a few from Cornell, I've yet to meet an engineer from another Ivy. The one impressing me most went to Penn State.
Engineering students from Ivy become quants on Wall Street
All of them? No. And quants also come from other schools as well. If you want to do that.
In my engineering class 20% went Quants, 20% patent lawyers, 20% consulting, 20% BigTech, 10% academia, and maybe 10% “engineering” ie aerospace, legacy electronics, automotive, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Our civil and structural engineers where I work all went to State U or community college and then transferred to State U.
They all have their State U diplomas on the walls at work.
We get EIT's from State U.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Been a practicing engineer for the past 10 years. Besides a few from Cornell, I've yet to meet an engineer from another Ivy. The one impressing me most went to Penn State.
Engineering students from Ivy become quants on Wall Street
All of them? No. And quants also come from other schools as well. If you want to do that.
In my engineering class 20% went Quants, 20% patent lawyers, 20% consulting, 20% BigTech, 10% academia, and maybe 10% “engineering” ie aerospace, legacy electronics, automotive, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Ivies are liberal arts schools. Harvard wasn't meant to be a technology school. The state of Massachusetts decided to build MIT for this reason. The rest of the ivies are based on the same liberal arts foundation. Even in Columbia with its engineering school, I don't know what percentage actually works in engineering. They are more likely to go to work in wall street.
Anonymous wrote:Aren’t the Ivy League school connections better than state schools or does that not apply to engineering?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Been a practicing engineer for the past 10 years. Besides a few from Cornell, I've yet to meet an engineer from another Ivy. The one impressing me most went to Penn State.
Engineering students from Ivy become quants on Wall Street
All of them? No. And quants also come from other schools as well. If you want to do that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our civil and structural engineers where I work all went to State U or community college and then transferred to State U.
They all have their State U diplomas on the walls at work.
We get EIT's from State U.
Interesting. The credits all transferred? Didn’t throw off the thing of prerequisites? Seems tough to transfer after two years.
Anonymous wrote:Our civil and structural engineers where I work all went to State U or community college and then transferred to State U.
They all have their State U diplomas on the walls at work.
We get EIT's from State U.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Been a practicing engineer for the past 10 years. Besides a few from Cornell, I've yet to meet an engineer from another Ivy. The one impressing me most went to Penn State.
Engineering students from Ivy become quants on Wall Street
Anonymous wrote:Does he really know he likes engineering? I’m a lot of ways it’s repetitive process driven work and it generally pays much less than other professional careers. I’m work for Air Force civilian — my 12 year old self loves it, my DW likes it a lot less since I don’t make much and often work 12 hour shifts during mission op
Obv CS/engineering at a FAANG is (or was) a good option. But CS doesn’t have the natural gate keepers of med/law nor the obsession with pedigree and class that finance has that prevented an oversupply of talent.
Good engineering schools are MIT CalTech, Harvey Mudd, CMU, GT, Mich, Purdue, etc. but if he has the chance to go to an Ivy, go there as if he changes his mind for career he will have a wealth of good options. Many engineering classmates switched to law or finance mid-program — engineering school is its own special slog.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC is a junior looking at engineering schools. I noticed there are many public schools ranked higher than ivy league schools. What makes these public schools ranked higher than private schools? Does Berkeley, Univ of Michigan, Georgia Tech, Perdue and UIUC offer that much better of an engineering education than Harvard, Princeton, Columbia, Univ Penn and Cornell?
You don’t even need to go to these bolded schools (nor MIT/CalTech). Most engineers in my company went to “affordable state university” programs. You would definitely get more respect for any of the bolded schools than for the Ivy programs. It’s not worth paying the Ivy premium for engineering.