add 1-2 more schools to my final list

<p>wut list is this</p>

<p>They are some of the schools with chemE programs being ranked by US News. The number indicates its rank. I don't want to copy and paste the entire list because I am not supposed to due to copyright.</p>

<p>so, copy parts of it i wanna see</p>

<p>Average assessment
score (5.0=highest)
1. Massachusetts Institute of Technology 4.8
University of Minnesota–Twin Cities 4.8
3. California Institute of Technology 4.7
University of California–Berkeley 4.7
5. Stanford University (CA) 4.5
University of Wisconsin–Madison 4.5
7. University of Texas–Austin 4.4
8. Princeton University (NJ) 4.3
University of Illinois–Urbana-Champaign 4.3
10. University of California–Santa Barbara 4.2
University of Delaware 4.2
12. Georgia Institute of Technology 4.0
Northwestern University (IL) 4.0
Purdue University–West Lafayette (IN) 4.0
University of Michigan–Ann Arbor 4.0
16. Carnegie Mellon University (PA) 3.9
University of Pennsylvania 3.9
18. Cornell University (NY) 3.8
19. North Carolina State University 3.6
Pennsylvania State University–University Park 3.6
University of Colorado–Boulder </p>

<p>This is graduate ranking (ranked 2005) based on peer assessment. However, the so-called undergrad ranking is pretty much a copy of the graduate ranking. Again, chemE core courses are very similar in most schools. What can be different are the quality of the students, the difficulty of homework assignment/projects (that's often a function of the quality of the students), the few courses that are tailored to the specialization that you are interested in, and the opportunity to get involve in exciting research. The professors at higher ranked schools tend to have more projects and they are likely more exciting too.</p>

<p>Oh..another thing is how well-connected the school is to the private industry. Some schools, including Northwestern, have well-established co-op program which is a step above "internship".</p>