grad school engineering programs at MIT/CALTECH/STANFORD/JOHN HOPKINS

<p>I would appreciate it if you could comment on my undergraduate stats/ likelihood of my acceptance into the listed schools' graduate programs. I have one more semester so the stats are bound to change slightly, and I am yet to take the GRE. </p>

<p>undergraduate major: biomedical engineering at Ga Tech [3rd program in the nation]
- Overall GPA: 3.72/4.0 ; major GPA: 3.9
- research experience: 2 years (1.5 in an interdisciplinary lab); anticipating 2 publications with coauthorship status (after graduate apps are due, unfortunately)
- 3 undergraduate research awards; 1 NSF-funded scholarship
- poster presentation at undergraduate conference
- continuing research as part of Ga Tech iGEM team (international competition for genetically engineered machines)
- vice president of a religious organization, and in the process of starting a volunteering organization </p>

<p>I am considering a wide range of engineering programs to apply for PhD Bioengineering/biophysics/mechanical/electrical engineering departments- hoping for an interdisciplinary project to work on...</p>

<p>My schools of interest are John Hopkins, MIT, Caltech, Stanford. I would really love to hear about some of their renowned labs and professor, graduate student life, etc...</p>

<p>Thank You!</p>

<p>well I believe the one big thing in grad school is self-learning…so perhaps you should practice that if you intend to go for your PhD ;).</p>

<p>haha mean but true</p>

<p>PS: Zohreh I think you have a very good chance but its not guaranteed</p>

<p>haha mean but true</p>

<p>PS: Zohreh I think you have a very good chance but its not guaranteed</p>

<p>Try Google for renowned professors and labs. There is way too much for people here to just randomly cover.</p>