Maybe because the list is not exhaustive? You guys are really overemphasizing the importance of rankings when it comes to engineering. UVA is an excellent school by any measure including its engineering school.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UVA has had a well respected Aerospace Engineering degree for more than 40 years.
They routinely place graduates to work at Boeing, Northrup, Lockheed, and elsewhere to actual design/engineer aircraft -- commercial & military, manned and unmanned.
UVA is nowhere on this list:
https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rankings/engineering-doctorate-aerospace-aeronautical-astronautical?myCollege=engineering-doctorate&_sort=myCollege&_sortDirection=asc
Anonymous wrote:DC applied for engineering /aerospace, got accepted in several good universities.
Assuming below are same price tag, which would make sense to visit for admitted events if DC visited one so far ( first in the list) and ready to commit.. We think it makes sense maybe to do at least one or two other visits just to see more than one?
Purdue Honors
UMD
Ohio State
Case western
Uflorida
UVA
VTech
UIUC
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UVA has aerospace. I have a kid at UVA Engineering and he knows of students who are graduating in May who have already landed jobs at Blue Origin and NASA.
How UVA compares to Purdue in this major and employment outcome? Considering Purdue ends up being $5k less
DP. There is no comparison at all. UVA doesn't rank in aerospace engineering and is waaaay down the list for general engineering. All of the other choices on this list would be better than UVA.
https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rankings/engineering-doctorate?myCollege=engineering-doctorate&_sort=myCollege&_sortDirection=asc
US News is irrelevant for many fields, including for engineering. ABET means that ranking and prestige do not matter as much for engineering as most other fields.
I completely disagree. I think they're spot-on in their engineering rankings. I'm sorry that UVA simply doesn't rate.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Just to clarify. UVA and V tech are our only in state options. Neither gave merit ( at least so far). All other oos schools have merit. Price wise UVA most expensive, VA tech least expensive. All other schools in between those two in state schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would visit Case. I think that the smaller private school experience is substantially different from the big public experience and he should see if he likes i
Also does he have other preferences? My kid likes cold weather. He wouldn’t pick solely on that, but if he got into such a great list of schools it might be enough for him to cross UF off. On the other hand, if your kid loves warm weather that would be a reason to visit.
Congrats to your kid on a fantastic list!
Thank you!
DC prefers cold, campus should have good rec centers with climbing walls and swimming pool. I feel they prefer nerdier crowd than party crowd. Not interested in parties, late nights and such, at least as of today. Very interested in strong technology advanced labs. Preferably close college town , not university dispersed within city ( like George Washington in DC, or Georgia tech in Atlanta).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UVA has aerospace. I have a kid at UVA Engineering and he knows of students who are graduating in May who have already landed jobs at Blue Origin and NASA.
How UVA compares to Purdue in this major and employment outcome? Considering Purdue ends up being $5k less
DP. There is no comparison at all. UVA doesn't rank in aerospace engineering and is waaaay down the list for general engineering. All of the other choices on this list would be better than UVA.
https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rankings/engineering-doctorate?myCollege=engineering-doctorate&_sort=myCollege&_sortDirection=asc
US News is irrelevant for many fields, including for engineering. ABET means that ranking and prestige do not matter as much for engineering as most other fields.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UVA has aerospace. I have a kid at UVA Engineering and he knows of students who are graduating in May who have already landed jobs at Blue Origin and NASA.
How UVA compares to Purdue in this major and employment outcome? Considering Purdue ends up being $5k less
DP. There is no comparison at all. UVA doesn't rank in aerospace engineering and is waaaay down the list for general engineering. All of the other choices on this list would be better than UVA.
https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rankings/engineering-doctorate?myCollege=engineering-doctorate&_sort=myCollege&_sortDirection=asc
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UVA has aerospace. I have a kid at UVA Engineering and he knows of students who are graduating in May who have already landed jobs at Blue Origin and NASA.
How UVA compares to Purdue in this major and employment outcome? Considering Purdue ends up being $5k less
UVA has a very strong AeroE program with ties to NASA, Boeing, SpaceX, and other major employers across the whole US, not just locally.
UVA Engineering also has a high engineering graduation rate - students who start in engineering are very likely to graduate with an engineering degree. They do not have any intentional weed out classes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UVA has aerospace. I have a kid at UVA Engineering and he knows of students who are graduating in May who have already landed jobs at Blue Origin and NASA.
How UVA compares to Purdue in this major and employment outcome? Considering Purdue ends up being $5k less
Anonymous wrote:UVA has had a well respected Aerospace Engineering degree for more than 40 years.
They routinely place graduates to work at Boeing, Northrup, Lockheed, and elsewhere to actual design/engineer aircraft -- commercial & military, manned and unmanned.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UVA has aerospace. I have a kid at UVA Engineering and he knows of students who are graduating in May who have already landed jobs at Blue Origin and NASA.
How UVA compares to Purdue in this major and employment outcome? Considering Purdue ends up being $5k less