<p>What are the best colleges for an undergraduate degree in Electrical Engineering? I'm going for early decision at Cornell University but if I get rejected [I'm a pessimist] then I'm wondering what other ones are good too.</p>
<p>Also as a question about ROTC, I'm thinking of going for a NROTC Scholarship since my family can barely even afford a state school, so could I get my masters degree in engineering after the bachelors before serving or would I first have to serve my 4 years and then go back to get my masters degree. I heard that its by a "how many years you are paid for = how many you serve active duty", but I'm not sure if one needs to serve immediatly after finishing the bachelors.</p>
<p>Some students will recieve imediate scholarships for their Masters, but not all. Sometimes your masters can be earned partway through your commitment.</p>
<p>"MIT, Stanford, Berkeley, Caltech, Illinois to name just a few."</p>
<p>lol only if I get get into them. I'm going to try to apply to Illinois though. I was first thinking of going to a service academy but then decided it was too structured and the medical requirments were the strictest I've ever seen in my life, and ROTC's medical requirments are a lot more lenient (They dont require u to start off with a 5:20 mile time, they'll train you to do that)</p>
<p>Uh, I believe you're talking about the "maximum score" you can achieve on the mile run section of the CFA. You certainly aren't required to start off with a 5:20 mile time and very few academy admittees will have that.</p>
<p>"1-Mile Run</p>
<p>Assume the starting position behind the 1-mile start line.</p>
<p>On the “Go” command, run continuously for one mile. Walking is allowed, but strongly discouraged.</p>