Anonymous wrote:Every engineer I know save one has gone to grad school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD is a junior interested in bio or biomedical engineering. I see a lot of posts saying “go to state school and save money for grad school”, but do most engineers go to grad school? DD really likes JHU (if she can get in), but wondering if it’s worth the money instead if state school.
If you're in MD, UMD is a great engineering school. If your kid gets in, s/he should go. My DS didn't get in. She did well as an undergrad elsewhere, and is now in a top grad engineering program. But I think she might have been working now and skipped grad school if she'd gotten into UMD. Her undergrad college didn't offer engineering.
Wasn't aware you could go to graduate engineering school without having studied engineering as an undergrad. What did your DS study in college?
Not PP. But, a physics major can easily handle engineering for grad school.
I doubt that. LOL.
My son is in year 3 of a PhD program in engineering at University of Michigan after majoring in physics at a SLAC and it has been pretty seamless.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They can go to law school and become a patent attorney
This is not the lucrative route that it was 25 years ago.
Anonymous wrote:They can go to law school and become a patent attorney
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD is a junior interested in bio or biomedical engineering. I see a lot of posts saying “go to state school and save money for grad school”, but do most engineers go to grad school? DD really likes JHU (if she can get in), but wondering if it’s worth the money instead if state school.
If you're in MD, UMD is a great engineering school. If your kid gets in, s/he should go. My DS didn't get in. She did well as an undergrad elsewhere, and is now in a top grad engineering program. But I think she might have been working now and skipped grad school if she'd gotten into UMD. Her undergrad college didn't offer engineering.
Wasn't aware you could go to graduate engineering school without having studied engineering as an undergrad. What did your DS study in college?
Not PP. But, a physics major can easily handle engineering for grad school.
I doubt that. LOL.
My son is in year 3 of a PhD program in engineering at University of Michigan after majoring in physics at a SLAC and it has been pretty seamless.
Burn. Where LOL? Come back!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD is a junior interested in bio or biomedical engineering. I see a lot of posts saying “go to state school and save money for grad school”, but do most engineers go to grad school? DD really likes JHU (if she can get in), but wondering if it’s worth the money instead if state school.
If you're in MD, UMD is a great engineering school. If your kid gets in, s/he should go. My DS didn't get in. She did well as an undergrad elsewhere, and is now in a top grad engineering program. But I think she might have been working now and skipped grad school if she'd gotten into UMD. Her undergrad college didn't offer engineering.
Wasn't aware you could go to graduate engineering school without having studied engineering as an undergrad. What did your DS study in college?
Not PP. But, a physics major can easily handle engineering for grad school.
I doubt that. LOL.
My son is in year 3 of a PhD program in engineering at University of Michigan after majoring in physics at a SLAC and it has been pretty seamless.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD is a junior interested in bio or biomedical engineering. I see a lot of posts saying “go to state school and save money for grad school”, but do most engineers go to grad school? DD really likes JHU (if she can get in), but wondering if it’s worth the money instead if state school.
If you're in MD, UMD is a great engineering school. If your kid gets in, s/he should go. My DS didn't get in. She did well as an undergrad elsewhere, and is now in a top grad engineering program. But I think she might have been working now and skipped grad school if she'd gotten into UMD. Her undergrad college didn't offer engineering.
Wasn't aware you could go to graduate engineering school without having studied engineering as an undergrad. What did your DS study in college?
Not PP. But, a physics major can easily handle engineering for grad school.
I doubt that. LOL.
Anonymous wrote:I would guess that, especially with what is happening currently, going into any biomedical field would be an excellent career path.
Most medical fields, including this one, require at least a masters degree if not a PhD. So the research to do is: can you get a job with an undergraduate biomedical engineering degree and have the company you work for pay for your graduate degree/PhD? If so, that’s awesome and what schools do those companies who pay for the higher degrees recruit out of? If Johns Hopkins is a resounding yes but a cheaper school is...maybe...that’s your answer. Invest the money in having JHU as a credential and let her employer pay for the higher degrees.
If this field requires you to have your masters or PhD before they’ll even interview you, then the answer is to go to the one of the cheapest schools that will still get you into the graduate programs they recruit out of. And save as much of the college money as you can to pay for the graduate degree.