<p>Im a 11th grader from oregon and i enjoy chemistry and math. i know that i want to go to college. i have a 3.0 GPA. but i dont know what school i want to go to and none of my teachers are really helping me in making up my mind. can some one please help me and tell me what would be a great college to go to to study Chemical Engineer or Math. any help would be great.</p>
<p>what state are you in?</p>
<p>I live in Oregon</p>
<p>You could try for Oregon State, but I don't really know much about that school.</p>
<p>
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Im a 11th grader from oregon
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what state are you in?
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I live in Oregon
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<p>Spectaaaacular...!</p>
<p>He surely edited that in later!</p>
<p>there is no 'edited' notification below, so he didnt edit</p>
<p>: ( </p>
<p>......................................(10char)()()()(()()()()()()()()()()()()()()()()()()(</p>
<p>TomHirschfeld brings up a very good point.</p>
<p>I can see how living in Oregon might cause a : (, however I must refute his charge of extraneous periods can fix the situation. </p>
<p>SHS,</p>
<p>You need to give us more information but right off the bat--why not Oregon University or Oregon State?</p>
<p>Hey, what state did you say you're from? I need this information to be of assistance</p>
<p>I just submitted my thesis to my graduate committee.</p>
<p>“Geographical identification and its impact on a high school senior’s scientific ability, in states above California and below Washington.”</p>
<p>Abstract:
A psychological, Runga-Kutta and gas chromatograph test was used to identify a student in the junior year high school age bracket, as a viable host for university studies in an unknown northwestern location. Student’s T-test identified his GPA as 3.0 within a 95 % confidence level and a time-domain frequency showed that ultimate behavior diverged between both Mathematics and Chemistry fields. A strong conclusion based on data was that student should study some sort of quantitative chemical field—possibly Chemical Engineering or drug dealing. Possible sources of errors include the approximate location and resident of said student.</p>
<p>that thesis must have been in industrial</p>
<p>Colorado, maybe. most of the good engineering schools taht fit your GPA are in the midwest. Purdue and Ohio State.</p>
<p>Look into your state schools, but if you're not completely enthralled by the selection, keep in mind that Oregon participates in the Western Undergraduate Exchange (WUE) with Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming. The institutions at this link participate:</p>
<p>WICHE</a> - Student Exchange Programs</p>
<p>You can go to any of them at a reduced tuition rate of 150% of in-state tuition, provided that you request it on your application. While many of the institutions involved aren't top-tier, some are very good.</p>