Best Schools for Engineering in the North East?

<p>So far:
Rutgers
Lehigh
Stevens
Rowan
Princeton</p>

<p>Need more suggestion please</p>

<p>MA
MIT, Olin, Tufts, WPI, Northeastern, BU
NY
Cornell, Columbia, Cooper Union, RPI, Rochester, Stony Brook, NYU Poly
NJ
Princeton, Stevens, Rutgers, NJIT, TCNJ, Rowan
NH
Dartmouth
Connecticut
U Conn</p>

<p>This is not a definitive list. I attempted to sort by selectivity, but a lot are very similar in ranking. Like WPI, Northeastern and BU are probably similar in ranking, and all way below MIT and Olin.</p>

<p>MIT, Tufts, Middlebury (via a joint program with Columbia), Carnegie Melon, BU, Cornell, UMich (maybe a little too far south), Northeastern… If you are in the ballpark for Princeton/MIT/Cornell then I would remove Stevens from your list for sure. Safety schools for you would be more like BU/Northeastern/Tufts level schools. One of my friends got into Carnegie Melon for engineering but decided to go to Northeastern because he got into the honors program and was offered a nice scholarship. If money is an issue for you, and you are a super high caliber student, you should definitely score some scholarships from the lesser schools on the list you have.</p>

<p>Oh just wanted to mention Villanova and Bucknell as well. Both are in PA.</p>

<p>Use the accreditation search at [ABET</a> -](<a href=“http://www.abet.org%5DABET”>http://www.abet.org) to find the schools with your desired engineering major in your desired region.</p>

<p>Not sure how far out of the region you want to go, but Virginia Tech and NCSU are relatively low price for out of state public schools.</p>

<p>is stony brook better than buffalo for engineering ?</p>

<p>Looking at Lehigh (in PA) and Rutgers (bigger state school) but not Penn State?</p>