<p>well, i want to go to med school, so i want A) a school that is cheap and B) a school where i can maintain a good gpa. idk, i know i do NOT want MIT/Cal Tech, but I have been thinking about Princeton and Stanford. I had heard that Columbia, Penn, and Cornell had the best engineering out of the ivies, is that correct? I really love the urban atmospheres of Columbia and Penn too. However, I also love CA and the South, so I honestly think I could be really happy at any of the schools on my list.</p>
<p>Well the schools you just mentioned are reaches for everyone, but you have great stats so you’ll probably get into one of them! Yay to female engineers–maybe we’ll end up at the same school :)</p>
<p>If you want to major in biomedical engineering, then go on to medical school, can I recommend Tulane? It is an excellent school and it’s in the south and urban. Tulane has a well respected name. </p>
<p>If your intent was to become an engineer, I wouldn’t recommend it, because it no longer has an engineering department by itself, so it would be difficult to switch to a different type of engineering if you didn’t like biomedical, but if your goal was to ultimately go to medical school, it would be a great school.</p>
<p>Good luck to you!</p>
<p>you have an awesome application, and i would hammer the love you have for being on stage and i totally know where you are coming from that. I think its a really special feeling performing and I think its something to highlight and apply to other parts of your life, like the lessons you have learned from dancing and acting. Other than that, everything else i great, but as you know it really is the essay, but the numbers and ECs will make you look very appealing to all you schools. I would check out Duke’s BME since they have a great school of engin.</p>
<p>UC Berkeley is also probably one of the top public school for engineering, so maybe that too</p>
<p>I’m a girl going to Vandy next year (class of '13) doing BME and I am pretty assured that you’re in. I didn’t take any subject tests, and I think my math on the SATI was a 690. You’ll be fine there.</p>
<p>Plus, the medical center is right on campus, which will more than likely lead to really good research opportunities, which I’m sure med schools will like. And I’m considering doing pre-med too, and everyone I’ve talked to doing BME there said the requirements for graduating BME and for pre-med are very similar, so you shouldn’t have any problem fulfilling them.</p>