Anonymous wrote:My DS recently graduated along with four of his cousins, and here are the stats:
- DS: Computer Engineering degree from UVA; 3.8 GPA; two internships in sophomore and junior; is currently jobless and looking,
- Cousin #1: CS degree from Cornell; 3.5 GPA; one internship in junior year; is currently jobless and looking,
- Cousin #2: CS degree from Virginia Tech; 3.7 GPA; one internship in junior year; is currently jobless and looking,
- Cousin #3: CS degree from Northwestern; 3.3 GPA; one internship in junior year; is currently jobless and looking; (OOS tuition)
- Cousin #4: CS degree from University of Michigan; 3.5 GPA; one internship in junior year; is currently jobless and looking; (OOS tuition),
- Cousin #5: CS degree from George Mason; 3.9 GPA; one internship in sophomore year; is currently working for a healthcare provider that pays him 125k/year,
Based on the small sample size above, it really does not matter where you go to school for Engineering or CS.
Anonymous wrote:This post is mostly intended for parents of current E School students or parents of HS students planning to go to E School.
Many Engineering schools do not have (much) grade inflation. Most E Schools grade each course on a curve. Often grades are curved to a 3.1 or 3.0 median grade, which means a fair number of students in a class will get a B- or C+.
Even those with lower GPAs will be able to get a good job after graduating with an engineering degree.
Parents ought not freak out if their E School kid does not have a top GPA. Parents should be supportive of all their college students, and a struggling E School student might need more support than some others.
All ABET accredited E Schools will have similar coursework with similar rigor. Very top schools like MIT/CalTech do not bother with ABET, but obviously they also are rigorous. Afternoons often will be spent in graded labs.
All this rigor means the E School college experience often has both less free time and less flexible time than students in Arts & Letters will have. E School is a hard slog for virtually any student with Feynman being the exception who proved the rule. When I was in E School, I only took off Friday night and Saturday night (and Sunday morning for church). Otherwise, it was mostly eat, sleep, or academics.
Students planning to apply to E School should try to take rigorous math, physics, and chemistry classes in HS. Calculus is essential, but getting an A in Calc AB is probably better than a C in Calc BC. Students with no calculus likely will struggle if they even are admitted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks for this. My dd is considering engineering majors but I am in the natural sciences and engineering is totally foreign to me. I even find it strange that you have to apply to specific programs during the admissions process (e.g., jhu and bme). How are these kids supposed to know what field they want to be in as a teenager?
BTW, I'm thankful that E schools are resisting grade inflation. Our bridges need to stand, after all.
The vast majority of elite schools do not require applying to a specific major. Most but not all require applying to the engineering school but even then switching majors all around or switching out or into the E school is easy. No gpa-gate-keeping into majors. The hard part is getting in to these E schools. Jhu bme is the rate exception among T20 private E-programs
What universities which offer engineering admit dont admit by major? We have a child who doesn't know if he wants to study math or engineering, or even a science. We are looking for schools where he just obtains school admission then has option to change the major depending on how much he likes it. Is there a list out there?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks for this. My dd is considering engineering majors but I am in the natural sciences and engineering is totally foreign to me. I even find it strange that you have to apply to specific programs during the admissions process (e.g., jhu and bme). How are these kids supposed to know what field they want to be in as a teenager?
BTW, I'm thankful that E schools are resisting grade inflation. Our bridges need to stand, after all.
The vast majority of elite schools do not require applying to a specific major. Most but not all require applying to the engineering school but even then switching majors all around or switching out or into the E school is easy. No gpa-gate-keeping into majors. The hard part is getting in to these E schools. Jhu bme is the rate exception among T20 private E-programs
What universities which offer engineering admit dont admit by major? We have a child who doesn't know if he wants to study math or engineering, or even a science. We are looking for schools where he just obtains school admission then has option to change the major depending on how much he likes it. Is there a list out there?
Maybe not T20, but just search. A few that come to mind: WPI, RPI, U Rochester, CWRU, Drexel, RIT, etc. They admit to the university and you can easily switch majors, provided you take the 2-3 entry-level courses and get a C+/B- in those courses (and that is fair). That way yes, your kid can switch around as they find their path. Even better, they can easily switch the type of engineering without having to have a 3.999 to get into BME.
Unique to WPI is the 7-week, 4-term system, plus 2 option summer terms, and the ability to erase a few classes if you bomb them (and retake or make a change). While the 7-week system is intense and really, really fast-paced (think of the hardest class you took and squeeze it into 7 weeks), it does let you figure out quickly if a certain path is not going to work for you, and then you have plenty time to make a change, erase the error, and use the optional summer session to catch up in a different area. They also give a lot of flexibility to take courses in an order that makes sense to you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This post is mostly intended for parents of current E School students or parents of HS students planning to go to E School.
Many Engineering schools do not have (much) grade inflation. Most E Schools grade each course on a curve. Often grades are curved to a 3.1 or 3.0 median grade, which means a fair number of students in a class will get a B- or C+.
Even those with lower GPAs will be able to get a good job after graduating with an engineering degree.
Parents ought not freak out if their E School kid does not have a top GPA. Parents should be supportive of all their college students, and a struggling E School student might need more support than some others.
All ABET accredited E Schools will have similar coursework with similar rigor. Very top schools like MIT/CalTech do not bother with ABET, but obviously they also are rigorous. Afternoons often will be spent in graded labs.
All this rigor means the E School college experience often has both less free time and less flexible time than students in Arts & Letters will have. E School is a hard slog for virtually any student with Feynman being the exception who proved the rule. When I was in E School, I only took off Friday night and Saturday night (and Sunday morning for church). Otherwise, it was mostly eat, sleep, or academics.
Students planning to apply to E School should try to take rigorous math, physics, and chemistry classes in HS. Calculus is essential, but getting an A in Calc AB is probably better than a C in Calc BC. Students with no calculus likely will struggle if they even are admitted.
Two engineers different schools and one family member whobhas taught at NC State and Cornell and others, has tenure at a different ivy. The rigor is no where near the same. Not close. At all. Top schools get the brightest students and the professors can and do move fast and expect more. The curriculum of one semester physics was covered in the first half a semester at the top school, similar situation with calculus pacing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks for this. My dd is considering engineering majors but I am in the natural sciences and engineering is totally foreign to me. I even find it strange that you have to apply to specific programs during the admissions process (e.g., jhu and bme). How are these kids supposed to know what field they want to be in as a teenager?
BTW, I'm thankful that E schools are resisting grade inflation. Our bridges need to stand, after all.
The vast majority of elite schools do not require applying to a specific major. Most but not all require applying to the engineering school but even then switching majors all around or switching out or into the E school is easy. No gpa-gate-keeping into majors. The hard part is getting in to these E schools. Jhu bme is the rate exception among T20 private E-programs
What universities which offer engineering admit dont admit by major? We have a child who doesn't know if he wants to study math or engineering, or even a science. We are looking for schools where he just obtains school admission then has option to change the major depending on how much he likes it. Is there a list out there?
Maybe not T20, but just search. A few that come to mind: WPI, RPI, U Rochester, CWRU, Drexel, RIT, etc. They admit to the university and you can easily switch majors, provided you take the 2-3 entry-level courses and get a C+/B- in those courses (and that is fair). That way yes, your kid can switch around as they find their path. Even better, they can easily switch the type of engineering without having to have a 3.999 to get into BME.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks for this. My dd is considering engineering majors but I am in the natural sciences and engineering is totally foreign to me. I even find it strange that you have to apply to specific programs during the admissions process (e.g., jhu and bme). How are these kids supposed to know what field they want to be in as a teenager?
BTW, I'm thankful that E schools are resisting grade inflation. Our bridges need to stand, after all.
The vast majority of elite schools do not require applying to a specific major. Most but not all require applying to the engineering school but even then switching majors all around or switching out or into the E school is easy. No gpa-gate-keeping into majors. The hard part is getting in to these E schools. Jhu bme is the rate exception among T20 private E-programs
What universities which offer engineering admit dont admit by major? We have a child who doesn't know if he wants to study math or engineering, or even a science. We are looking for schools where he just obtains school admission then has option to change the major depending on how much he likes it. Is there a list out there?
Anonymous wrote:Thanks for this. My dd is considering engineering majors but I am in the natural sciences and engineering is totally foreign to me. I even find it strange that you have to apply to specific programs during the admissions process (e.g., jhu and bme). How are these kids supposed to know what field they want to be in as a teenager?
BTW, I'm thankful that E schools are resisting grade inflation. Our bridges need to stand, after all.
Anonymous wrote:In general, the "better" the school, the easier it is to change majors. This applies mostly to private colleges. However, at strong engineering programs at public schools like the UC's, UIUC, Purdue, etc. there is much more gatekeeping.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks for this. My dd is considering engineering majors but I am in the natural sciences and engineering is totally foreign to me. I even find it strange that you have to apply to specific programs during the admissions process (e.g., jhu and bme). How are these kids supposed to know what field they want to be in as a teenager?
BTW, I'm thankful that E schools are resisting grade inflation. Our bridges need to stand, after all.
The vast majority of elite schools do not require applying to a specific major. Most but not all require applying to the engineering school but even then switching majors all around or switching out or into the E school is easy. No gpa-gate-keeping into majors. The hard part is getting in to these E schools. Jhu bme is the rate exception among T20 private E-programs
What universities which offer engineering admit dont admit by major? We have a child who doesn't know if he wants to study math or engineering, or even a science. We are looking for schools where he just obtains school admission then has option to change the major depending on how much he likes it. Is there a list out there?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks for this. My dd is considering engineering majors but I am in the natural sciences and engineering is totally foreign to me. I even find it strange that you have to apply to specific programs during the admissions process (e.g., jhu and bme). How are these kids supposed to know what field they want to be in as a teenager?
BTW, I'm thankful that E schools are resisting grade inflation. Our bridges need to stand, after all.
The vast majority of elite schools do not require applying to a specific major. Most but not all require applying to the engineering school but even then switching majors all around or switching out or into the E school is easy. No gpa-gate-keeping into majors. The hard part is getting in to these E schools. Jhu bme is the rate exception among T20 private E-programs
What universities which offer engineering admit dont admit by major? We have a child who doesn't know if he wants to study math or engineering, or even a science. We are looking for schools where he just obtains school admission then has option to change the major depending on how much he likes it. Is there a list out there?