Anonymous wrote:Mudd was pretty grueling when I was there. Make sure your kid knows how to work hard. Mudd is now test optional but if your SAT math is under 700 you'd be unwise to attend.
Anonymous wrote:I'm surprised no one has mentioned Harvey Mudd yet. 900 undergrads and the school is focused on engineering.
Anonymous wrote:For very small, Haverford has a 4+1 masters engineering program with Penn - https://www.haverford.edu/engineering
Anonymous wrote:Union is a great school but it doesn’t offer Civil.
Bucknell and Lafayette do, though.
As does Clarkson, WPI, Case Western, Rochester, etc.
RPI is just over 7K. Same with Lehigh.
Also might want to look at SUNY-ESF. Less then 3K students, and it’s part of Syracuse University (you get a big school and a small school at the same time). Doesn’t offer Civil, but offers Environmental Engineering (subfield of Civil). Also offers Chemical Eng, Bio Eng, and Paper Eng. On top of that, they offer a Construction Management + Science (also a subfield of Civil) degree that allows students to take the FE exam if they take a few extra courses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's your definition of little/small? Case Western is 5150 undergrads
I think he thinks the smaller the better, but 5K could work. He likes the idea of a school where the focus is tech.
Possible U of Rochester, too, then, and Tufts.
Is Tufts mostly tech? I did not realize that.
-- OP
In the freshman class, 1800 were enrolled in arts and science and 1340 in school of engineering. That isn’t “mostly” tech but is much higher than the percentages you will see at most if not all of the LACs people are listing as responses.
There are approximately 1800 freshman total. Less than 300 engineers out of that group. It’s a great school but definitely not a lot of “Tech”. Same w U Rochester.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one has mentioned Lehigh which is insane to me. Is that too big?
OP here, I think it might be. I went to Northwestern, which has great engineering and is not that much bigger, and I think he wants a smaller experience than I had.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's your definition of little/small? Case Western is 5150 undergrads
I think he thinks the smaller the better, but 5K could work. He likes the idea of a school where the focus is tech.
Possible U of Rochester, too, then, and Tufts.