Anonymous wrote:UMD Clark school of engineering has study abroad in Madrid and Prague, where they offer engineering courses. https://eng.umd.edu/global/study-abroad
I don't have personal experience in these programs, but I seem to remember some parents on the UMD FB Parents Group saying study abroad is doable for engineering students at UMD.
Anonymous wrote:Public Health (a very popular undergrad degree now in the US). He will first get a broad understanding of how to study/influence the factors that impact POPULATION health (different than medicine, which focuses on individuals).
One of Public Health's five core discipines is Environmental Health. He can get his Masters in that specialty. They learn about things like air and water quality and LITERALLY (for example) factors that go into building safe wells for communities.
People trained in public health also share the sensibilities of the type of people who choose to work for MSF (though of course there are other employers for this degree/training).
I would be proud to have a son with those aspirations!
Anonymous wrote:Michigan! Best engineering labs I have seen on campus tours. They also offer study abroad
I don't think DWB (or other nonprofits working on wells) care too much about ABET accreditationAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^^
Harvey Mudd (oops)
OP here,
Mudd seems amazing, and like he would love it, but I have heard that civil engineering is the field where ABET matters the most because safety is a huge issue and because so many employers are government or government contractors.
Does anyone know how aspiring civil engineers do with a general engineering degree?
WPI. He could build wells as part of his major qualifying project, and students routinely go abroad for them.Anonymous wrote:My son showed me this job announcement and told me it’s his dream job:
https://www.doctorswithoutborders.org/careers/work-field/find-role/water-sanitation-specialists
He wants a civil engineering degree, but he also wants to learn another language and maybe study abroad.
He is a strong student, particularly in STEM, who prefers hands on to abstract learning.
So, what schools might be a fit?
Anonymous wrote:IME it can be hard for engineering majors to do a full semester study abroad because of how structured the programs are but they may be able to do a winter/summer break study abroad. Also, look into applying for the peace corps post-graduation where you could likely get a lot of that experience.
One school to look at -- WPI, the have a project-based study abroad program
https://www.wpi.edu/project-based-learning/project-based-education/global-project-program