<p>Hi, i wanted to know which college or university would be good for me. I am a Hispanic Texas male, 4.19gpa, 1920 SAT, rank 29/670 that wants to major in Biochemistry, Chemistry, or Biology.</p>
<p>U Wisconsin. Good shot at full scholarship. One of the top biochem depts in the US. Same for chem and bio in all its forms.</p>
<p>if you would be interested in a small school, check out connecticut college- a hispanic male is just what theyre looking for in increasing diversity and balancing out gender ratio!</p>
<p>great BCMB program, countless opportunities for undergrad research, and several profs have recently received federal research grants (which is great for a small liberal arts school)
here's the most recent one: <a href="http://aspen.conncoll.edu/camelweb/index.cfm?fuseaction=ccnews&id=2659%5B/url%5D">http://aspen.conncoll.edu/camelweb/index.cfm?fuseaction=ccnews&id=2659</a></p>
<p>You would be a very competitive admissions candidate at these schools;</p>
<p>Worcester Polytechnic Institute, MA
Hood College, MA
George Mason University, VA
U of San Diego, CA</p>
<p>Hood and USan Diego have a reputation for good financial aid. George Mason University is a public college in the Washington DC suburbs, and there are good opportunities for undergraduate research.</p>
<p>Gourman Report ranking for undergraduate biochemistry</p>
<p>Biochem from Gourman
Harvard
MIT
UC Berkeley
Wisconsin
Yale
UCLA
Cornell
UC San Diego
U Chicago
U Illinois
Columbia
U Michigan
U Penn
UC Davis
Brandeis
Northwestern
Princeton
U Iowa
Michigan State
Rice
Case Western
Purdue West Lafayette
Oregon State
NYU
U Oregon
Rutgers New Brunswick
SUNY Stony Brook
U Texas Austin
Iowa State
UC Riverside
Penn State University park
USC</p>
<p>Gourman biology</p>
<p>Biology rankings from Gourman Report
Caltech
MIT
Yale
Harvard
Wisconsin
UC San Diego
UC Berkeley
U Colorado
Columbia
Stanford
U Washington
U Chicago
Duke
Wash U St Louis
UCLA
U Michigan
Cornell
U Penn
Purdue
Indiana U
UNC Chapel Hill
U Utah
Johns Hopkins
Northwestern
Princeton
UC Irvine
Notre Dame
UC Santa Barbara
UVA
Brown
U Illinois Urbana Champaign
U Pittsburgh
Vanderbilt
U Oregon
SUNY Stony Brook
U Rochester
Tufts
U Minnesota
SUNY Buffalo
U Texas Austin
Florida State
Michigan State
USC
U Connecticut
UC Riverside
Rice
Iowa State
SUNY Albany
Case Western
Boston U
Ohio State
NYU
U Iowa
Penn State
Emory
Brandeis
U Kansas
Rutgers New Brunswick
Tulane
US Air Force Academy
U Missouri Columbia</p>
<p>Gourman Report undergrad chemistry ranking:
Caltech
UC Berkeley
Harvard
MIT
Columbia
Stanford
Illimois Urbana Champaign
U Chicago
UCLA
Wisconsin Madison
Cornell
Northwestern
Princeton
Yale
Purdue
UNC Chapel Hill
Ohio State
Texas Austin
Iowa State
Indiana Bloomington
UC San Diego
Minnesota
Notre Dame
Penn State
Brown
U Rochester
Carnegie Mellon
U Penn
Rice
Michigan Ann Arbor
U Washington
Colorado Boulder
Texas A&M
USC
U Pittsburgh
U Florida
UC Riverside
dartmouth
UC Santa Barbara
UC Irvine
Johns Hopkins
UC Davis
U Utah
U Oregon
Duke
Michigan State
RPI
UVA
Florida State
Vanderbilt
Case Western
u Iowa
Georgia Tech</p>
<p>Oops! Hood College, a fine LAC, is located in rural Maryland. Sorry about the typo.</p>
<p>Huh..</p>
<p>I would love to find reliable rankings on where to consider attending for the biological sciences. (Biology fanatic, at your service!)</p>
<p>Are these Gourman ones good to look into?</p>
<p>I've also seen the supposed ranking from U.S. News on a Princeton thread, but I cannot find the origins of it.</p>
<p>Trundle down to the nearest bookstore with $10 and buy the US News grad rankings book. It has rankings for bio and biochemistry areas. You won't find a recent UG ranking anywhere but for the large schools the grad rankings are pretty accurate.</p>
<p>do you have the gourman ranking for physics?</p>
<p>I personally find it a little silly that the Gourman report lists Caltech as the best school in both chemistry and biology but doesn't consider it to be in the top 50 for biochemistry. </p>
<p>I'm sure it's because Caltech doesn't strictly have an undergrad major called 'biochemistry', but it's ridiculous to exclude schools based on how they label their curricula.</p>