Anonymous wrote:JMU is a great school, not as well known for engineering.
Anonymous wrote:JMU
Anonymous wrote:JMU is not strong in engineering. If you can afford, go with Pitt.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the school matters to an employer, they are not going to hire someone from JMU or Pitt. For most employers, engineers are assumed to be competent because engineering programs are very rigorous (failing out large percentage of students) and have to comply with professional requirements.
JMU bills itself as a large liberal arts school. This was communicated to me and DD on a campus visit earlier this year. It is primarily a bachelors level university. Nothing wrong with that. I guess you could say that the engineering department at JMU is maybe a fledgling program that provides a well rounded engineering education that is closest to traditional mechanical engineering. Throw in some sustainability courses for good measure. Pitt is a PdD granting research university with a college of engineering with multiple departments. I suppose if one is interested in mechanical engineering then it could be a valid comparison. Otherwise Pitt would be the clear choice and yes employers know Pitt.
DP. Just wanted to comment re: the bolded. JMU offers plenty of graduate degrees.
https://www.jmu.edu/grad/programs/areas-of-study.shtml
Thank you. I didn't phrase that well at all. JMU does have a number of master's programs, but the number (and types) of programs combined with the relatively small percentage of the student body that is in graduate school, led to my poor wording. The main point is that JMU is a regional university vs. a university that is concerned with PhD level research (e.g., Pitt).