Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a strange list…waste of anyone’s time to rank a bunch of randomly aggregated schools.
It seems really random, but what they have in common is that except for the two in state schools, they're the schools that offer my kid's sport, and engineering, minus some schools where we think he wouldn't get enough financial aid.
Recruitment for his class starts in the summer, and he needs to be ready to make decisions about which coaches he wants to talk to. So, trying to get a sense of which schools are better than our in state options. He'd love to play in college, but only if it means a school that's similar to or better than what he might attend otherwise.
What sport is at Brown but not Cornell?
Water polo
Cornell has actual polo
They have club water polo.
https://collegiatewaterpolo.org/club/schedules/mensclub/new-york-division-m23/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a strange list…waste of anyone’s time to rank a bunch of randomly aggregated schools.
It seems really random, but what they have in common is that except for the two in state schools, they're the schools that offer my kid's sport, and engineering, minus some schools where we think he wouldn't get enough financial aid.
Recruitment for his class starts in the summer, and he needs to be ready to make decisions about which coaches he wants to talk to. So, trying to get a sense of which schools are better than our in state options. He'd love to play in college, but only if it means a school that's similar to or better than what he might attend otherwise.
What sport is at Brown but not Cornell?
Water polo
Cornell has actual polo
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Brown
Caltech
Chapman University
George Washington University
Harvard
Harvey Mudd
Johns Hopkins
Loyola Marymount University
MIT
Princeton
Santa Clara University
Stanford
UMBC
UMD - CP
USC (California)
University of the Pacific
Guessing you're in-state in MD so the only schools I put pick over in-state tuition and engineering program at UMD-CP are: Brown, Stanford, Caltech, MIT, JHU, Harvard, Princeton and possibly Harvey Mudd. Don't waste your money at the others and have your kid play club at UMD
NPC’s at most of the schools come in near or below UMD for us.
— OP
Got it, we were in a similar situation with DC. I would stick with my previous list and then throw in the schools that your DC likes the coach, likes the team, and will get playing time. For a recruit, this actually isn't a very long list. Get ready for tons of emails, texts and phone calls. You'll find out fairly quickly which schools are interested in your DC. Start with filling out the "recruitment questionnaire" for each school
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a strange list…waste of anyone’s time to rank a bunch of randomly aggregated schools.
It seems really random, but what they have in common is that except for the two in state schools, they're the schools that offer my kid's sport, and engineering, minus some schools where we think he wouldn't get enough financial aid.
Recruitment for his class starts in the summer, and he needs to be ready to make decisions about which coaches he wants to talk to. So, trying to get a sense of which schools are better than our in state options. He'd love to play in college, but only if it means a school that's similar to or better than what he might attend otherwise.
What sport is at Brown but not Cornell?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a strange list…waste of anyone’s time to rank a bunch of randomly aggregated schools.
It seems really random, but what they have in common is that except for the two in state schools, they're the schools that offer my kid's sport, and engineering, minus some schools where we think he wouldn't get enough financial aid.
Recruitment for his class starts in the summer, and he needs to be ready to make decisions about which coaches he wants to talk to. So, trying to get a sense of which schools are better than our in state options. He'd love to play in college, but only if it means a school that's similar to or better than what he might attend otherwise.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Civil? Structural? Mechanical? Environmental?
Mechanical
As a mechanical engineer, this would be my personal ranking (not just based on ME programs):
Stanford
MIT
Princeton
Brown
Caltech University
Harvard
Harvey Mudd
USC (California)
I wouldn’t really consider the rest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Civil? Structural? Mechanical? Environmental?
Mechanical
As a mechanical engineer, this would be my personal ranking (not just based on ME programs):
Stanford
MIT
Princeton
Brown
Caltech University
Harvard
Harvey Mudd
USC (California)
I wouldn’t really consider the rest.
Not Hopkins?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Brown
Caltech
Chapman University
George Washington University
Harvard
Harvey Mudd
Johns Hopkins
Loyola Marymount University
MIT
Princeton
Santa Clara University
Stanford
UMBC
UMD - CP
USC (California)
University of the Pacific
Guessing you're in-state in MD so the only schools I put pick over in-state tuition and engineering program at UMD-CP are: Brown, Stanford, Caltech, MIT, JHU, Harvard, Princeton and possibly Harvey Mudd. Don't waste your money at the others and have your kid play club at UMD
NPC’s at most of the schools come in near or below UMD for us.
— OP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Civil? Structural? Mechanical? Environmental?
Mechanical
As a mechanical engineer, this would be my personal ranking (not just based on ME programs):
Stanford
MIT
Princeton
Brown
Caltech University
Harvard
Harvey Mudd
USC (California)
I wouldn’t really consider the rest.
Anonymous wrote:Who puts UMBC, MIT, Brown, GW and Loyola Marymount is the same list for anything, let alone engineering? It’s like randomly grabbing college names out of a bag.
Please explain the thought process behind this list OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Civil? Structural? Mechanical? Environmental?
Mechanical
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Brown
Caltech
Chapman University
George Washington University
Harvard
Harvey Mudd
Johns Hopkins
Loyola Marymount University
MIT
Princeton
Santa Clara University
Stanford
UMBC
UMD - CP
USC (California)
University of the Pacific
Guessing you're in-state in MD so the only schools I put pick over in-state tuition and engineering program at UMD-CP are: Brown, Stanford, Caltech, MIT, JHU, Harvard, Princeton and possibly Harvey Mudd. Don't waste your money at the others and have your kid play club at UMD
Anonymous wrote:Brown
Caltech
Chapman University
George Washington University
Harvard
Harvey Mudd
Johns Hopkins
Loyola Marymount University
MIT
Princeton
Santa Clara University
Stanford
UMBC
UMD - CP
USC (California)
University of the Pacific
Anonymous wrote:Who puts UMBC, MIT, Brown, GW and Loyola Marymount is the same list for anything, let alone engineering? It’s like randomly grabbing college names out of a bag.
Please explain the thought process behind this list OP.