Engineering list

<p>Northwestern.
[Choose</a> Undergraduate Engineering at McCormick | McCormick School of Engineering | Northwestern University](<a href=“Undergraduate Study | Academics | Northwestern Engineering”>Undergraduate Study | Academics | Northwestern Engineering)

  1. unique first-year curriculum called Engineering First - integrated and hands-on
  2. One of the most established engineering co-op programs
  3. 6 departments in the top-20 and 2 departments in the top-5</p>

<p>Thanks all for your replies. </p>

<p>Some of you mentioned that I should go to a school where I would enjoy. That is exactly my intention, so I would like some insight into the campus life at some of these universities, please. Which school would have plenty of activities for a student to explore and enjoy during our free time and over the weekends? I’m a sports and nature person, so a school with such an environment would be great. </p>

<p>Btw, may I clarify does a co-op program mean?</p>

<p>Cornell University for the outdoors stuff. It’s on a finger lake and campus has beautiful gorges through it. Take a look!</p>

<p>Bump please</p>

<p>Engineering, sports, and nature - University of Washington in Seattle (near me). It would have a fair number of international students, PAC-12 sports, and easy access to the mountains.</p>

<p>Colorado School of Mines, Penn State and Cal Poly SLO also are worth a look. Cornell would be great.</p>

<p>Rice would be a good university with a great engineering experience, but sports and nature - not so much.</p>

<p>How about northwestern from this perspective?</p>