Engineering generally is not a field that is highly school-prestige-conscious, though on-campus recruiting can favor larger schools, well known *for engineering/i schools, and schools local to employers (e.g. Wichita State and Alabama - Huntsville for aerospace).
Since you did not name any of the colleges or the kind of engineering and employment that she is interested in, no one can even guess if any of the colleges would offer any internship or first-job-at-graduation recruiting advantages.
She should check carefully whether she is directly admitted into the engineering major of choice, or if she is admitted into a first year pre-engineering program (as is the case for all engineering frosh at Purdue, Minnesota, Texas A&M, and Virginia Tech), or general admission not in engineering (sometimes happens to applicants at schools like UIUC and Washington who do not make the cut for direct admission to the majors that they apply for). If she is not directly admitted into the engineering major of choice, or if she may change majors, she should check the web sites of the schools to see how difficult it will be to enter or change to her desired major.