Deciding between UT and Trinity University. Please help!

So, I’m pretty much finished with the college application process and have narrowed my choices down to two schools. I got a great package at Trinity University and I got waitlisted at UT before being admitted. The UT process was very messy-- I applied to BME, got waitlisted, appealed the decision, and then (I think without them having reviewed my appeal) was admitted into the university two days after submitting my appeal with the option of 5 available majors, none of them in the Engineering department. They offered me the following majors: sustainability, health and society, human dimensions of organizations, geography, and urban studies. Studying engineering is important to me and I am willing to do whatever it takes to get into Cockrell.

My question is: what should I do? I can either go to Trinity, try to excel as an Engineering Science major there so that I could possibly transfer into UT engineering, or I can accept UT’s offer so that I can possibly later do an internal transfer into Cockrell. Would it be easier to do an internal transfer, or will I have a better bet studying at Trinity where I can take engineering courses so that I do not fall behind on engineering curriculum?

My other question is: do you think that they may place me in Cockrell after reading my appeal? I basically tried to emphasize my passion for engineering and my struggles with learning disabilities that I have since learned to manage.

My advice would actually be to go to Trinity and stay there! You might find this thread informative:
http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/texas-colleges/1871302-university-of-texas-versus-trinity-university-p1.html

@rayrick This is very helpful. Thank you!

Go to Trinity… and plan to stay there. You’ll learn a lot, have a terrific time, and will have a more personalized engineering education than at UT. (Of course, if after 3 semesters you still want to go to UT, you can just apply as a transfer - it’s easier to go from Engineering at a good university to Cockrell, than from a non-engineering major to Cockrell, because at least you’ve proved your mettle in Engineering.)

:slight_smile: