Any Stanford Graduates out there?

<p>I am currently an Undergrad at UCLA School of Engineering and will be graduating with a CS&E bachelors and Accounting Minor. I currently have a 3.5 (exactly) and plan to apply to graduate school. </p>

<p>I wanted to know my chances of applying to schools such as Stanford, and other top engineering schools, and what schools I should be applying to.</p>

<p>I want to join a program that has some business aspect to it (I want to join the Stanford Managerial Science and Engineering program) and some engineering aspect. </p>

<p>As I stated, I currently have a 3.5, one good letter of rec (from research) from a MIT/Stanford graduate professor, an on campus job, and I will have an internship with a fortune 500 company this summer. For the other two letters of rec, I would find another professor and look for someone in the internship i have this summer.</p>

<p>Any recommendations? thank you.</p>

<p>The admission statistics are posted here:
[Department</a> of Management Science and Engineering - Admissions](<a href=“Management Science and Engineering”>Management Science and Engineering)</p>

<p>Admission rates usually vary between 25 and 35 percent, which is more favourable than those of other SU graduate programs…but because the numbers are public, be aware of self-selection bias.</p>

<p>Good luck! :)</p>

<p>uclagraduate, I can’t exactly help you with your question but I’m hoping you can answer some of mine about UCLA Engineering. How is UCLA and their engineering programs? What would you change about your experience in the past 4 years?</p>

<p>thank you for the help, i will definitely try my best</p>

<p>I can. What year are you and what are you studying? UCLA engineering program has been great to me, but of course there are things I would change about my experience over the last 4 years. With that said though, I did not know many things back then that I know now.</p>

<p>I’m studying CS&E, and it’s been great. Many of the classes are great, but there are some not-so-great teachers (as in any other school) that focus solely on there research. We have a lot of resources here at UCLA, and depending on what you want to do, there is many options. If you are looking for more of a entrepreneur route, you can do join orgs that focus on entrepreneurship, and if you are interested in the more technical side, there are organizations for that.</p>

<p>Let me know what questions you have and I can answer them for you.</p>