Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MAybe easier to get into than "elite" schools but much harder work once in, and then that is the payoff.
I'd hire a Purdue engineering grad over most other engineering school grads in the top ten, excepting probably MIT, Caltech, Stanford CS (but not meche or cheme) and maybe...Princeton hard core engineering. Though maybe.
The copium comes out.
Not sure what you mean. I didn't go to any of these schools, and went instead to "elite" schools. I teach at an "elite" private school and have a startup. I'd choose to hire from these schools over the school where I work. How is that an emotional shortcoming? Or what are you meaning by "copium" these days, which honestly seems poorly placed here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Both UIUC and UW are increasingly difficult to get into out of state. I suspect that they will be in the low-to-mid 30s (OOS) this year and keep trending toward to the low 30s.
Wisconsin will likely return to required testing in 2027 which will be interesting.
These are both great schools that have great reputations. It really doesn’t matter if people on this board, at cocktail parties or at the Vineyard or Gibson Island don’t know or care.
Where have you heard they will likely return to required testing?
Anonymous wrote:Both UIUC and UW are increasingly difficult to get into out of state. I suspect that they will be in the low-to-mid 30s (OOS) this year and keep trending toward to the low 30s.
Wisconsin will likely return to required testing in 2027 which will be interesting.
These are both great schools that have great reputations. It really doesn’t matter if people on this board, at cocktail parties or at the Vineyard or Gibson Island don’t know or care.
Anonymous wrote:UW Madison is not easy to get into. It’s acceptance rate is below 20-30%
Anonymous wrote:Why do you care what other people think?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Schools like UGA, Purdue, UW Madison, and UIUC are extremely hard to get into now. I know people with straight As and 1500+ SAT scores who got denied from these places, even in-state. For engineering, UIUC has a sub 10% acceptance rate. You have to be a top student to get into these state flagships
Not true: only for CS.
UW Madison is a great school that’s surprisingly easy to get into. UIUC too, if not CS. UGA is a tier or two below the others.
These schools are not hard to get into except for engineering at Purdue and UIUC, and even then Purdue is easier.
+1. "Not hard to get into" as compared with trying to land a t20. I have an engineering kid at UW–Madison OOS who is having a great time learning/growing but I must admit that the school isn't too hard to get into compared to these crazy single-digit acceptance rate schools.
Anonymous wrote:MAybe easier to get into than "elite" schools but much harder work once in, and then that is the payoff.
I'd hire a Purdue engineering grad over most other engineering school grads in the top ten, excepting probably MIT, Caltech, Stanford CS (but not meche or cheme) and maybe...Princeton hard core engineering. Though maybe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Schools like UGA, Purdue, UW Madison, and UIUC are extremely hard to get into now. I know people with straight As and 1500+ SAT scores who got denied from these places, even in-state. For engineering, UIUC has a sub 10% acceptance rate. You have to be a top student to get into these state flagships
Not true: only for CS.
UW Madison is a great school that’s surprisingly easy to get into. UIUC too, if not CS. UGA is a tier or two below the others.
These schools are not hard to get into except for engineering at Purdue and UIUC, and even then Purdue is easier.
Anonymous wrote:It is annoying. For UMD we have people at the same time:
1. complaining that it's too hard to get into
2. putting down kids that choose to attend
Which is it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MAybe easier to get into than "elite" schools but much harder work once in, and then that is the payoff.
I'd hire a Purdue engineering grad over most other engineering school grads in the top ten, excepting probably MIT, Caltech, Stanford CS (but not meche or cheme) and maybe...Princeton hard core engineering. Though maybe.
The copium comes out.
Anonymous wrote:MAybe easier to get into than "elite" schools but much harder work once in, and then that is the payoff.
I'd hire a Purdue engineering grad over most other engineering school grads in the top ten, excepting probably MIT, Caltech, Stanford CS (but not meche or cheme) and maybe...Princeton hard core engineering. Though maybe.