Chances for top engineering graduate school?

@cobyt501st - Just my humble opinion, but first you need to decide what you want to do. Do you want to be an engineer or something else? Do you want a Master degree on a PhD? You are comparing apples to oranges. Then you need to better understand the graduate school admissions process. There are some great pinned threads on this board. Much of your posted credentials are irrelevant for graduate school admissions. For an engineering masters degree, your grades, GRE, and employer recommendations are key, as they would be for say an MBA. If you want a PhD, then you need research experience, strong recommendations from professors, and top grades, with less weighting of the GRE.

And overall you need to understand the difference between engineering college reputation. Along with Stanford and MIT, the top engineering graduate programs are almost all at public universities such as Georgia Tech, Michigan, Purdue, Cal and Illinois. There are only three Ivy-League schools in the top 20 (Princeton, Cornell, and Penn). So an engineering PhD from Yale (rated at 38) would be less prestigious to engineers than an engineering PhD from North Carolina State (27).

And as @boneh3ad explained this gets further complicated for PhD candidates because you want to apply to the college that is strongest in the type of research that interests you. For example, my son wants to focus on plasma space propulsion for his PhD in aerospace engineering . This is really applied physics rather than traditional AE. So my son will apply to the colleges that are strongest in plasma propulsion research. Michigan has historically been number-one. Georgia Tech hired a top Michigan researcher in 2004 to start their program and now they are very strong too. Princeton is also very good (number two in graduate physics). So these will be his top choices. It would be senseless to apply to top AE programs like Purdue, Texas, or Illinois for an AE PhD, because he couldn’t do the research that interested him.

An overall comment - your GPA looks low for admission to top programs in either engineering or otherwise.

I hope this helps.