<p>im torn...
which one will provide me with better opportunities for better jobs in the future?
im considering engineering major btw.
i heard brown's open curriculum kinda makes it harder to get jobs.
i heard cornell is really stressful.
i dunno much about hopkins.</p>
<p>Hopkins is in Baltimore, so if you like cities, your decision is easy, though Providence isn’t all bad either. Engineering, go with Cornell or Hopkins (Hopkins mainly for biomedical engineering). Yeah, I’m confused about how the open curriculum with pass/fail grading such that if you fail the grade doesn’t go on the transcript can be such a positive. Most schools are still pretty open with just distributive requirements (can’t imagine anybody going through college without a humanities, math, science course). Anyway, yeah, Cornell or Hopkins for engineering, mostly Cornell.</p>
<p>Cornell is no more stressful than Hopkins.</p>
<p>Of the three, Cornell engineering will definitely provide the best opportunities for jobs. But the other two are no slouches either.</p>
<p>My friends at Hopkins hate it there due to the people and surroundings. But, choose JHU for biomed, Cornell for other engineering/hard sciences, Brown for humanities. Brown is really not a good choice for engineering.</p>
<p>These link may help. earning potential with a Cornell engineering degree is superior than a JHU engineering degree. Brown is just not known for engineering.</p>
<p>[Best</a> Ivy League Schools By Salary Potential](<a href=“http://www.payscale.com/best-colleges/ivy-league-schools.asp]Best”>http://www.payscale.com/best-colleges/ivy-league-schools.asp)</p>
<p><a href=“http://www.payscale.com/best-colleges/top-us-colleges-graduate-salary-statistics.asp[/url]”>http://www.payscale.com/best-colleges/top-us-colleges-graduate-salary-statistics.asp</a></p>
<p>brown’s open curriculum does not make it harder to get jobs. who told you that? brown sends students to some of the most competitive jobs, fellowships, and grad schools at higher rates than most other schools in the ivy league. in fact traditionally straight-laced employers (like goldman sachs) go out of their way to recruit brown students because they think brown students are more creative (goldman sachs continues to be the number one employer of graduating brown seniors)</p>
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<p>A brown engineering alum?</p>