Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are all in on small liberal arts schools. Except for engineering. I would not send a kid to an actual SLAC for engineering.
Most have some amorphous notion of Liberal Arts as literally liberal and arts. It is cross disciplinary between Humanities , Social Sciences and Natural Sciences. Many don't realize that LACs have always produced a lot of really good STEM graduates. Engineering is the "E" in STEM. At Swarthmore for instance 62.5% of the credits required to graduate in engineering must be in Eng+Math+Science as compared to 66% at Cornell. This is not really very different. The balance credits are available for use across the humanities and sciences. The main difference lies in the undergraduate only teaching focus, small classes, access to undergrad research opportunities and access to high quality undergrad humanities and social science courses for balance distribution/interests.
A high percent of LAC STEM (including Eng) graduates are double majors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When do you think this makes sense? I have a highschooler who seems to be drawn to both, but they don't seem to overlap, except maybe at a couple schools, and then maybe not so well.
Somebody here must have had their child do engineering at a LAC, right?
Swarthmore and Harvey Mudd are the best intersection of the two. A close compromise would be Ivies or similar -sized top privates: they each have about 250-500 engineering students per year, not counting cornell which is both larger and more siloed like publics with engineering. With 250-500 in the engineering school each year it feels smaller like a LAC in many ways yet the benefit is the huge research dollars and benefits of a 5000-10000 size uni that SLACs do not have
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bucknell has a strong engineering program and an even stronger alumni network. You'll find Bison in high-level positions across baby industries, invitations engineering and especially finance. They love to hire other alums and help them start lucrative careers.
PP. This should read "many industries" but autocorrect, which shouldn't exist, is always a pain, and is never helpful, thinks it's smarter than I am. (It's not. I went to Bucknell.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was going to say Rose-Hulman too. OP— DH and I are both SLAC grads. He’s a software engineer, who believes he benefitted greatly from the reading, writing, small class heavy curriculum and has a huge advantage in his career because he can communicate and problem solve well. We felt very strongly about our kids attending SLACs. One did. The other is at W&M (which is close to being a SLAC) and all the other options were SLACs. We are all in on small liberal arts schools. Except for engineering. I would not send a kid to an actual SLAC for engineering.
I think you can be Rose-Hulman, Cooper Union, Olin, etc and do engineering at a small school or undergrad focused engineering. But I don’t think you can get a good engineering education at a true liberal arts school. And SLACs recognize this and offer the 3+2 and 2+2 programs— which really are the worst of both worlds.
Actual liberal arts is a rigorous program of study. Engineering is a rigorous program of study. You can’t really do both well— especially on a small campus.
Harvey Mudd is an excellent education. And may call itself a LAC. But you can’t get a decent humanities major there. It’s isn’t truly a liberal arts college, because good liberal arts colleges benefits from having majors across the humanities-STEM spectrum.
Can Harvey Mudd student double major in humanities with classes from other Claremont colleges?
Technically, maybe?? But practically?? Not in 4 years. I don’t care how much AP credit your bring in. Engineering has so many required classes. It’s nice they are with the other colleges. It adds something. They can get good humanities electives. But the school itself is closer to Rose-Human than a LAC. Not to ding Mudd which is top notch at what it does. But you just don’t have the cross disciplinary living and learning that is the hallmark of a good liberal arts education. And if you go too far into the humanities side with your courseload, you water down the engineering education. Maybe you could do both. I don’t think you can do both well. And engineering isn’t worth it if you aren’t going to do it well.
I believe strongly in undergrad focused institutions for undergrad education, and the larger schools with grad programs for grad school. I would consider a larger Purdue/VT school for an engineering kid. I’d prefer a midsize private (like Case, Tufts, Rice) or a small engineering focused school (Olin, Rose-Human, Cooper Union, Mudd) for an Engineer. Probably the midsize private because I know kids who have gotten started in engineering and changed their minds. At a Cooper Union type school, that’s not an option. At a school like Case, you don’t have to transfer.
Anonymous wrote:We are all in on small liberal arts schools. Except for engineering. I would not send a kid to an actual SLAC for engineering.
Anonymous wrote:When do you think this makes sense? I have a highschooler who seems to be drawn to both, but they don't seem to overlap, except maybe at a couple schools, and then maybe not so well.
Somebody here must have had their child do engineering at a LAC, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was going to say Rose-Hulman too. OP— DH and I are both SLAC grads. He’s a software engineer, who believes he benefitted greatly from the reading, writing, small class heavy curriculum and has a huge advantage in his career because he can communicate and problem solve well. We felt very strongly about our kids attending SLACs. One did. The other is at W&M (which is close to being a SLAC) and all the other options were SLACs. We are all in on small liberal arts schools. Except for engineering. I would not send a kid to an actual SLAC for engineering.
I think you can be Rose-Hulman, Cooper Union, Olin, etc and do engineering at a small school or undergrad focused engineering. But I don’t think you can get a good engineering education at a true liberal arts school. And SLACs recognize this and offer the 3+2 and 2+2 programs— which really are the worst of both worlds.
Actual liberal arts is a rigorous program of study. Engineering is a rigorous program of study. You can’t really do both well— especially on a small campus.
Harvey Mudd is an excellent education. And may call itself a LAC. But you can’t get a decent humanities major there. It’s isn’t truly a liberal arts college, because good liberal arts colleges benefits from having majors across the humanities-STEM spectrum.
Can Harvey Mudd student double major in humanities with classes from other Claremont colleges?