Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Asked and answered a couple of months ago. Hope this helps.
https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/1160226.page
Thanks! Yikes!
+1
Definately research the ARCH program and visit troy.
Also understand that RPI is in financial trouble, only time will tell if the new president can correct this. When we visited 2+ years ago, the buildings were in bad shape---outside everything was in desperate need of painting/repair. The ARCH program is likely a ploy to get more money---forcing kids to live on campus for summer after sophomore year and have a meal plan, then forcing them to only "be on campus for fall OR spring of junior year", which means many just live on campus because that is easier than finding off campus for only a semester.
For my kid, we drove into Troy and my kid said Nope, no way will I be coming here. We still did the tour but I agreed with them, it was depressing and not somewhere I would want to live. And it's not just the weather, my kid is 3 hours away in similar weather, but a much nicer city (not that exciting but still much better and the campus is much better )
Anonymous wrote:The good: Great education, solid job opportunities, strong reputation in STEM fields.
The bad: Ugly campus, depressing town, heavily skewed gender ratio (two guys for every girl)
The ugly: The coeds. This ain't Arizona State, to put it mildly.
Anonymous wrote:Troy is obviously the “ugly”
Anonymous wrote:Has morale improved in the faculty and student body since the new President arrived?Anonymous wrote:Great academics. Collaborative students. Only IBM quantum system on a college campus. Tremendous list of accomplished alumni. Strong financial aid. This school is undervalued, and I rate it as a buy. It is rigorous, and students are forced to decide early if they really want to learn. My son took summer classes after his freshman year at RPI at an elite and highly ranked institution. He said the academic work over the summer was “easy” compared to what he experienced at RPI. He worried that he shouldn’t have taken the summer classes because he may not have learned the material as well.
Has morale improved in the faculty and student body since the new President arrived?Anonymous wrote:Great academics. Collaborative students. Only IBM quantum system on a college campus. Tremendous list of accomplished alumni. Strong financial aid. This school is undervalued, and I rate it as a buy. It is rigorous, and students are forced to decide early if they really want to learn. My son took summer classes after his freshman year at RPI at an elite and highly ranked institution. He said the academic work over the summer was “easy” compared to what he experienced at RPI. He worried that he shouldn’t have taken the summer classes because he may not have learned the material as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:RPI is a depressing environment and a slog of a college experience, but students get an amazing engineering education and are sought after at most prestigious engineering employers.
It was nearly 40 years ago, but I had the same experience at WPI. Just didn't like the environment of an engineering school, and Worcester was no great place (though maybe arguably better then Troy.)
I lasted a year. Transferred to a state university. Dropped engineering but remained in STEM. Maybe should have stuck with engineering, because I did well in the prerequisite classes. And now I make a mediocre salary lower than what I probably would have made with an engineering degree in a job that is likeable but not loveable to me.
I wish I had had Virginia Tech as an option. A good engineering program within a larger, diverse college community. And a cool little college town.
Maybe WPI has changed. It seems to have all the trappings of a typical college: all the sports, including football and marching band that marches through campus, enough but not too crazy or dominating Greek life, a whole lot of music, theater and fine arts programming for an engineering school, walkable restaurants and bar and food options, multiple other local colleges and easy transportation to Boston, nearly everyone travels abroad which is pretty rare for an engineering program.
Which institution?Anonymous wrote:Great academics. Collaborative students. Only IBM quantum system on a college campus. Tremendous list of accomplished alumni. Strong financial aid. This school is undervalued, and I rate it as a buy. It is rigorous, and students are forced to decide early if they really want to learn. My son took summer classes after his freshman year at RPI at an elite and highly ranked institution. He said the academic work over the summer was “easy” compared to what he experienced at RPI. He worried that he shouldn’t have taken the summer classes because he may not have learned the material as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:RPI is a depressing environment and a slog of a college experience, but students get an amazing engineering education and are sought after at most prestigious engineering employers.
It was nearly 40 years ago, but I had the same experience at WPI. Just didn't like the environment of an engineering school, and Worcester was no great place (though maybe arguably better then Troy.)
I lasted a year. Transferred to a state university. Dropped engineering but remained in STEM. Maybe should have stuck with engineering, because I did well in the prerequisite classes. And now I make a mediocre salary lower than what I probably would have made with an engineering degree in a job that is likeable but not loveable to me.
I wish I had had Virginia Tech as an option. A good engineering program within a larger, diverse college community. And a cool little college town.