<p>What are best colleges universities for computer engineering?</p>
<p>The only problem that I would have would be of finance I believe.</p>
<p>What are best colleges universities for computer engineering?</p>
<p>The only problem that I would have would be of finance I believe.</p>
<ol>
<li>Stanford</li>
<li>MIT</li>
<li>UC Berkeley</li>
</ol>
<p>lol, I need a longer list maybe upto 50 colleges at least</p>
<p>Umm. Okay.
Good colleges are, ucla ,usc, unc ch, uw-seattle, uw-madison, ut austin, purdue, upenn, penn state-up, ucsd, ucsb, cornell, univ of rochester, TAMU, uiuc, georgia tech, brown, blah blah :P</p>
<p>Go to us news and rankings if you want a list of the top ranked programs</p>
<p>Choose the best one that fits your financial needs</p>
<p>Don’t really know what more you want from this thread</p>
<p>If cost is a big factor, you may get more help if you describe what you can afford and your state of residency.</p>
<p>Okay Ucbalumnus!</p>
<p>I am an international student!
Hence the tution fee that I would have to pay would be higher than in state residents.
I can afford nothing more than 18K$ an year.</p>
<p>Does that 18k limit include housing and living expenses or just tuition?</p>
<p>Just tuition fees.</p>
<p>So you can afford about $30,000 total per year ($120,000 total for four years)?</p>
<p>In the US, that limitation screens out a lot of universities. There are a few that come in under that all-in, like the South Dakota public universities.</p>
<p>Hong Kong University of Science and Technology costs less than that for international students. No idea how selective it is, though.</p>
<p>[HKUST</a> Undergraduate Admissions - International](<a href=“http://join.ust.hk/international/applyhere/tuition_and_fees.html]HKUST”>http://join.ust.hk/international/applyhere/tuition_and_fees.html)</p>
<p>Some international students in the US do two years at low cost community colleges, then transfer as juniors to complete their bachelor’s degrees in another two years. This still means paying non-resident tuition and living expenses at the community colleges, but that is usually significantly less than at four year universities, allowing (cost-wise) a greater range of four year universities for the last two years.</p>
<p>Take a look at university of Idaho, Moscow. It is in a remote place but is one of the best places for computer engineering with heavy focus on semiconductors.</p>
<p>Missouri University of Science and Technology. Routinely on the best value lists, and every graduating compe i know including myself has a job lined up a semester in advance.</p>
<p>Stony Brook University is also on the best value list.</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>Do this, it’s the smart move. Get all the prerequisites done at CC (won’t necessarily take 2 years) and transfer to a big state flagship. Pretty much any state should be fine. Doing this you’ll only have to pay for 5 semesters of university (it will vary in cost but most will be between 15K and 25K a semester) and 3 semesters of CC (at about 3K a semester, though this also varies widely), as opposed to 8 semesters of university which it appears you cannot afford. </p>
<p>Now, in computer engineering you will get internships pretty reliably after sophomore and junior year as well, and you can make pretty good money in these, so you may be able to afford more than you think you can afford if you haven’t taken that into consideration. You might also get some merit scholarships at some universities, so that can help as well. </p>