Anybody have some rankings on intern programs?

<p>I see on several places that certain colleges say they are ranked well for their co-op/intern programs. I've seen Kettering, Drexel, Georgia Tech, and Purdue all advertise that they are "ranked" by US News for their programs. Well I can't find these rankings. Can anybody provide a link for me or post them up here?</p>

<p>Straight off of Kettering’s site: ‘America’s Best Colleges’ - News Article - Kettering University</p>

<p>PROGRAMS TO LOOK FOR – INTERNSHIPS/CO-OP
Kettering is again among the “schools with outstanding examples of academic programs that are commonly linked to student success,” according to the editors at U.S. News & World Report. Only 18 institutions received this national distinction for 2010:
Alverno College (WI)
Berea College (KY)
Bradley University (IL)
Drexel University ¶
Elon University (NC)
Georgia Institute of Technology*
Johnson and Wales University (RI)
Kettering University (MI)
Keuka College (NY)
New York University
Northeastern University (MA)
Ohio State University–Columbus*
Portland State University (OR)*
Purdue Univ.–West Lafayette (IN)*
Rochester Inst. of Technology (NY)
University of Cincinnati*
Univ. of Maryland–College Park*
Univ. of Southern California</p>

<p>HEHE, got some</p>

<p>From my understand Georgia Tech has the best internship program out of schools that do not have co op. I go to Northeastern and we have the oldest and most expansive program out of the co op schools.</p>

<p>Georgia tech is a gold mine for any would be traders. They’ve got a trading floor simulation and I was thinking about getting my graduate degree there. But just wanna test the market a bit before going back to grad school and doing what I really wanna do, trade. That’s where the real money is… take $100mm and make $100mm in 1 year…</p>

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<p>Have you done that?</p>

<p>On a smaller scale?</p>

<p>If you can consistently make 100% a year and have the trading statements to back it up, you can probably get a trading job without a degree. Doesn’t matter whether you’re playing with $10,000, $100,000 or $100,000,000.</p>

<p>You will see different rankings everywhere you look online. I think there are factors to consider that would far outweigh numerical rank for almost every student.</p>