Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:another thing is that some schools really try to weed out the engineering majors. IMO this is not necessary. if you choose a school that is known for weeding out, then it is going to be a tough time.
True, but if you make it through a weed-out program, then you are among the best. Employers know this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:another thing is that some schools really try to weed out the engineering majors. IMO this is not necessary. if you choose a school that is known for weeding out, then it is going to be a tough time.
True, but if you make it through a weed-out program, then you are among the best. Employers know this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read between the lines a bit - Pomona has easier physics coursesAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s just people not very well acquainted with Mudd. Some engineering students end up falling flat on their face in physics classes and have to take Pomona physics classes, which have better profs/more support, to pass.
This is strange. Do you mean that a prestigious STEM college doesn't have better profs than Pomona? Physics is hard, but that is not a prof's fault if the student is finding it hard. As far as I know, one of Mudd's physics prof is a visiting faculty at Caltech. ALL of Mudd's faculty have a PhD from a prestigious institution, and to be a faculty at Harvey Mudd, one needs to teach extremely well.
DD attends Pomona as a math major and hates taking classes at Mudd. It’s not that the classes are harder, because the content is more difficult; the professors at Mudd suck and are eager to mark down than up- this is great for students who don’t need high scores since they’ll be going to Google or Apple, but DD wishes to go to grad school and Mudd profs are really unhelpful.
Mudd students struggle just as hard in Pomona math courses as Pomona students.
This follows with what I noticed with my own kids. DS went to Williams and worked much harder than DD, and is now at a top grad school for math, but DD’s grades were pitiful coming from an engineering school, and I’m not convinced that it was that “she’s not smart enough.” The engineering profs breed a culture of bullies and there’s a strange desire to show how rigorous you are when it doesn’t actually make for better students or researchers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read between the lines a bit - Pomona has easier physics coursesAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s just people not very well acquainted with Mudd. Some engineering students end up falling flat on their face in physics classes and have to take Pomona physics classes, which have better profs/more support, to pass.
This is strange. Do you mean that a prestigious STEM college doesn't have better profs than Pomona? Physics is hard, but that is not a prof's fault if the student is finding it hard. As far as I know, one of Mudd's physics prof is a visiting faculty at Caltech. ALL of Mudd's faculty have a PhD from a prestigious institution, and to be a faculty at Harvey Mudd, one needs to teach extremely well.
DD attends Pomona as a math major and hates taking classes at Mudd. It’s not that the classes are harder, because the content is more difficult; the professors at Mudd suck and are eager to mark down than up- this is great for students who don’t need high scores since they’ll be going to Google or Apple, but DD wishes to go to grad school and Mudd profs are really unhelpful.
Mudd students struggle just as hard in Pomona math courses as Pomona students.
Anonymous wrote:We have started to enter into the college admissions process. My DS is a sophomore and is very much interested in studying engineering in college. I know we are a little far from applying to colleges, but in my family, we believe in research and in making well-thought-out decisions about academic, social, and financial fit. I would appreciate some clarification about the rigor, selectivity, job prospects, reputation, etc., of engineering colleges.
Through our preliminary research, we came to know many engineering colleges, both private and public, offer various levels of academic rigor. A little background: I came to know about Harvey Mudd when my co-worker told me her son chose Mudd over Caltech. That piqued my interest in learning more about it. Last year, another student I came across in our school chose Mudd over CMU and Rice.
I have looked at more than 20-30 posts here at DC Urban for unbiased discussions, and whenever anyone speaks about Harvey Mudd, they seem to always add a disclaimer, “it is HARD,” “a pressure cooker,” or “it’s very tough to graduate…”
But at the same time, when talking about top colleges for STEM, names like Caltech, MIT, and CMU are suggested without any such disclaimer. They are also HARD, I believe. Are the students at Harvey Mudd not as meritorious (as other well-known colleges) in handling the rigor?
I understand that It is not a household name, but I know it’s very well-known in the STEM world. Then, why does Harvey Mudd carry such a disclaimer along with its name? Why is Harvey Mudd’s academic rigor emphasized so much when all the top STEM colleges have similar academic rigor?
Anonymous wrote:another thing is that some schools really try to weed out the engineering majors. IMO this is not necessary. if you choose a school that is known for weeding out, then it is going to be a tough time.
Anonymous wrote:My first week in E School, the Dean spoke to all the incoming E School students. He approximately said:
"Every one of you is fully capable of graduating. We filter our acceptances carefully to avoid giving false hope. Engineering is hard for everyone. Use faculty office hours to get help. Start homework when it is assigned, not the night before it is due."
It was good advice and that E school did have a 4-yr graduation rate above 90%.
HS friend who instead went to VT got the "look left and right, only 1 of you will graduate in engineering in 4 years" speech. He graduated on time from VT, but it was not in Engineering. Last I heard, he worked part time nights as a security guard and evenings as staff at a math tutoring center.