Anonymous wrote:It’s ABET- accredited. That’s very good to know, thanks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Good luck to your kid - sounds like some good options. My kid is also leaving VA (because there are wonderful... schools [elsewhere] that appealed). The cost for us came in substantially under in-state UVA, thankfully!
That's great. Can you share the schools?
I'm sorry but that is too much personal information.
I can tell you that if you look at the flagship engineering schools that aren't hot with 1%ers, there are many places that do a great job.
I recommend you look at the engineering rankings at USNWR for those between 20 and 50.
Your post is not helpful.
I truly hope you are not the OP.
I'm outa here. Too many ill-willed people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MIT Stanford Berkley Cal Tech Carnegie Mellon -- Why not stick to the top schools?
You must be new here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Purdue
+1
They have 16 engineering majors and 1st year students have to take a course that explores all of those majors before declaring a major. Big time on site recruiting. They seem to offer merit aid sufficient to bring the costs to be competitive with in-state east coast tuition. They have a couple "Purdue Days" in spring with full day programs - we found that very informative.
What a waste of money and time.
Anonymous wrote:MIT Stanford Berkley Cal Tech Carnegie Mellon -- Why not stick to the top schools?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Good luck to your kid - sounds like some good options. My kid is also leaving VA (because there are wonderful... schools [elsewhere] that appealed). The cost for us came in substantially under in-state UVA, thankfully!
That's great. Can you share the schools?
I'm sorry but that is too much personal information.
I can tell you that if you look at the flagship engineering schools that aren't hot with 1%ers, there are many places that do a great job.
I recommend you look at the engineering rankings at USNWR for those between 20 and 50.
Your post is not helpful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Good luck to your kid - sounds like some good options. My kid is also leaving VA (because there are wonderful... schools [elsewhere] that appealed). The cost for us came in substantially under in-state UVA, thankfully!
That's great. Can you share the schools?
I'm sorry but that is too much personal information.
I can tell you that if you look at the flagship engineering schools that aren't hot with 1%ers, there are many places that do a great job.
I recommend you look at the engineering rankings at USNWR for those between 20 and 50.
Anonymous wrote:Engineer here. There are really no bad engineering programs because they tend to weed less qualified or motivated students out. The difference between elite schools (eg MIT, Stanford) and everyone else is that the weeding out happens during admissions. And of course those elite schools have great networks,facilities, etc. But your child will get a solid education from any program. I say this having attended both a normal school for undergrad and an "elite" school for grad school.
Have you considered co-op schools, like Drexel or Northeastern? These programs will allow your child to actually try out engineering for six months at a time, in a form of extended paid internship. Really good experience and provides your child with info on whether engineering will be a good career fit (vs just class study) and whether they should consider a different type of engineering (eg comp vs electrical) based on the type of work. We engineers call this a feed back loop