<p>I’m not a fan of co-oping but have considered it.</p>
<p>northwestern has an engineering program where you can be an engineering student, and earn money by working at a company (And graduate in 5 years) I suggest you check it out :)</p>
<p>Thanks, i wasn’t aware of this and will definitely check it out. </p>
<p>UIUC, Purdue, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities, University of Michigan-Ann Arbor, Georgia Tech, University of Texas</p>
<p>What sort of Engineering? That can make a difference on the schools and what industries recruit those majors at each school.</p>
<p>Texas A&M is another option I didn’t see listed above. They have better money to reward that UT for some reason.</p>
<p>I think he wanted chemical engineering</p>
<p>Yes i did want chemical engineering, and also am strongly considering tamu.</p>
<p>The OOS publics are unlikely to be full-need, and I would not advise someone who is full-need to do co-op or stretch out schooling past 4 years as fin aid is often only for 4 years.</p>
<p>That includes A&M.</p>
<p>Lehigh is probably the easiest of the full-need schools to get in to (with engineering).</p>
<p>Torveaux, i would love to attend those places but i live in missouri and can’t come close to affording the out of state tuition of some of those schools. the only one i am interested in is uminn(see original question) because of their chemE program and they are relatively affordable</p>
<p>Thanks for the advice PurpleTitan, it makes alot of sense</p>
<p>in my last reply, i meant bjjvja, not torveaux</p>
<p>does anyone think duke is good for engineering? i know biomed eng but what about others? </p>
<p>anyone?</p>
<p>going back to a previous post, could an out of stater with an EFC of 0 attend the University of Alabama?</p>
<p>My son is starting ChemE this fall at Oklahoma. He strongly considered TAMU as well as we are in-state, but the money was not quite a good.</p>
<p>I went to UMinn and it is a very good school as well. </p>
<p>Mom2collegekids is the resident Alabama expert (they should be paying her). S1 looked there as well, but he just didn’t like the layout of the campus and they didn’t seem to ‘court’ him as much as OU.</p>
<p>thanks for the response, it’s nice to hear approval from alumni of u minn
(were u an engineering major?)</p>
<p>All of the full-need schools will be good for engineering.</p>
<p>What type of engineering again?</p>
<p>LOL. No, I started out as a CompSci major and realized very quickly that I was out of my league in terms of math and physics. My BS is in Poli-Sci.</p>
<p>Thanks for the advice
purpletitan: Chemical Engineering</p>
<p>Just make sure an egineeering program is ABET certified (they should be).</p>
<p>alright</p>