Colleges w/ Good Math Programs

<p>Hi all, I'm looking at a number of colleges and am interested in majoring in General Mathematics. So far I've picked out a few and wanted to get opinions on them. Any other suggestions are appreciated.</p>

<p>NYU
BostonU
SUNY Geneseo
Harvard
RIT</p>

<p>If your looking for math and Harvard is on your list, might want to try Princeton. </p>

<p>I looked at RIT for math. Their department seemed pretty solid, but I didn't like the school. NYU has one of the best math grad programs in the country. Don't know anything about their undergrad program though.</p>

<p>DK78-
Where are you from? What are your SATs?</p>

<p>Your list seems too divergent with both Harvard and RIT. Tell us more about yourself.</p>

<p>Gourman Report ranking for undergrad math:
Princeton
UC Berkeley
Harvard
MIT
U Chicago
Stanford
NYU
Yale
Wisconsin Madison
Columbia
Michigan Ann Arbor
Brown
Cornell
UCLA
Illinois Urbana Champaign
Caltech
Minnesota
U Penn
Notre Dame
Georgia Tech
U washington
Purdue WL
Rutgers NB
Indiana U Bloomington
U Maryland College Park
Rice
UC San Diego
Northwestern
Texas Austin
carnegie Mellon
Johns Hopkins
Washington U St Louis
Ohio State
SUNY Stony Brook
Penn State
UVA
RPI
Illinois Chicago
U Colorado Boulder
U Kentucky
UNC Chapel Hill
Dartmouth
U Rochester
U Utah
SUNY Buffalo
Tulane
USC
UC Santa Barbara
U Massachusetts AMherst
U Oregon
Duke
Louisiana State Baton Rouge
U Arizona
case Western
Michigan State
U Pittsburgh
Brandeis
US Air Force Academy</p>

<p>I'm from NY and am looking around the northeast area. First time around on the SATs i picked up 1820, CR:560 W:630 M:630 which isn't outstanding, but I'm retaking them in the fall with a better grasp of all the subjects (when I took them in the spring of junior year we hadn't covered things like sequences and series in my precalc class) On the NYS Math B Regents I scored a 96 and held an average of 96+ in the class. Had I not transferred out of a private school that didnt offer regents exams I would be in AP Calculus BC, but instead am heading into AP Calculus AB. I hope that helps.</p>