<p>Does anyone know of any D3 schools in the mid atlantic to northeast area with engineering majors?</p>
<p>Union in Schenectady, NY and RPI in Troy, NY immediately come to mind.</p>
<p>Tufts & MIT</p>
<p>Worcester Poly Tech (in Worcester)
Wentworth (in Boston)</p>
<p>Most of the NESCAC’s have a 3+2 program with Dartmouth for Engineering. Conn College, Wesleyan, Trinity, Bowdoin, etc</p>
<p>swarthmore</p>
<p>MIT, RPI, WPI, RIT, IIT, CIT … did I miss any of the “I” schools?</p>
<p>Carnegie Mellon?</p>
<p>Washington University in St. Louis? (oops, not exactly mid-Atlantic!)</p>
<p>Johns Hopkins (except for lacrosse which is D1)</p>
<p>Since this is the athletic forum, are you looking for D3 schools with engineering that also recruit (as in admissions advantage)? If so, that list will be a subset of those mentioned above.</p>
<p>well the sport I am looking to play is golf, so i figured that not very many of these colleges would give golf scholarshps… so to answer your question, no.</p>
<p>No DIII school can offer athletic scholarships, but playing golf well, may help you gain admission if a coach thinks you are a valuable recruit. Some schools will offer needs-based aid only, and others will offer a combination of merit, leadership and need-based grants, with or without loans. You have to look at each school’s FA policy and take the FA calculators for a spin to determine where you can get the most generous package.</p>
<p>mwh015,</p>
<p>I started on this site a bunch of years ago asking the very same question. </p>
<p>Our original requirements were midatlantic, engineering and D1 baseball. Those requirements quickly changed to East coast, engineering and D1 baseball because of many factors mostly due to baseball recruiting…we needed to cast a larger net. In addition to those colleges already mentioned, we looked at Case Western in Cleveland. </p>
<p>What we found for engineering on the East coast were “boutiquey” engineering schools such as Tufts, WPI, RPI (D3) or the large state schools (D1) with engineering colleges. For us, it was a tough athletic fit between those two as both recruit baseball very differently. The best advise I can give you is to broaden your search when you are not getting the desired results. We had to broaden our search twice.</p>
<p>Also, it takes a very special student to play a sport and major in engineering. For this reason, I was very adamant about a D3 school for my son (less games, less travel than a D1). He did not end up at a D3, but it is worth the time to talk about it.</p>
<p>Best of luck!</p>