Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rennselaer Polytechnic Institute - might be less than your DC wants on urban amenities, but lovely campus and engineering is basically what they do.
RPI is a depressing, gloomy place - they threw $$$ at me and I turned them down. I was an engineering major and went to Hopkins.
Anonymous wrote:Rennselaer Polytechnic Institute - might be less than your DC wants on urban amenities, but lovely campus and engineering is basically what they do.
Anonymous wrote:Rice would be a good fit - campus is near downtown Houston (easy connection via light rail) and lots of big city amenities but it's a pretty bucolic real campus setting. It's not an east coast-style city, but there are good museums, an impressive arts scene, and amazing food. Plus, Texas culture
Anonymous wrote:Rennselaer Polytechnic Institute - might be less than your DC wants on urban amenities, but lovely campus and engineering is basically what they do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where do studemts co-op and internship at Michigan?
My engineering student at Michigan had internships at Microsoft in Redmond, WA, a startup in Chicago, and will co-op at Dell in Austin this fall.
Where do they co-op locally? Most students don’t travel to co-op. It is too costly and lonely. That is why most co-op schools are urban.
Maybe for lower-end programs, but top programs offer co-ops all over.
Yes, but the majority are local, even in the top programs. Most kids go local or go back home. Going off for live by yourself for 6 months is not the norm for co-ops unless your school is in a crappy area.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where do studemts co-op and internship at Michigan?
My engineering student at Michigan had internships at Microsoft in Redmond, WA, a startup in Chicago, and will co-op at Dell in Austin this fall.
Where do they co-op locally? Most students don’t travel to co-op. It is too costly and lonely. That is why most co-op schools are urban.
Maybe for lower-end programs, but top programs offer co-ops all over.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where do studemts co-op and internship at Michigan?
My engineering student at Michigan had internships at Microsoft in Redmond, WA, a startup in Chicago, and will co-op at Dell in Austin this fall.
Where do they co-op locally? Most students don’t travel to co-op. It is too costly and lonely. That is why most co-op schools are urban.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does the kid have the stats to aim for Stanford? Can’t think of anywhere that has more opportunities than Silicon Valley for tech.
Doesn’t get more suburban than Dtanford. Luxury mall on one side, golf course on the other. Yuk.
Anonymous wrote:Does the kid have the stats to aim for Stanford? Can’t think of anywhere that has more opportunities than Silicon Valley for tech.
Anonymous wrote:Does the kid have the stats to aim for Stanford? Can’t think of anywhere that has more opportunities than Silicon Valley for tech.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rice would be a good fit - campus is near downtown Houston (easy connection via light rail) and lots of big city amenities but it's a pretty bucolic real campus setting. It's not an east coast-style city, but there are good museums, an impressive arts scene, and amazing food. Plus, Texas culture
I have 2 cousins who went to Rice and loved it. One is a now a Dr and the other an exec in technology.
Other ideas: University of Washington and Berkley