<p>You should apply to USC for sure. Other good schools in CA include UCSB, UCSD and UC Davis. UCSB is particularly good if you are interested in the materials science side of things, which I am guessing you are not, given your current interest in comp.E.</p>
<p>does that mean staford doesn't fund all of its students unlike MIT making it easier? can i have some data?</p>
<p>How good is the Cornell ECE M.Eng. program compared to UCLA EE M.S. program?</p>
<p>Which one is the best CA except for Stanford, Cal Tech?</p>
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Jessiehl. Are u from MIT?
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<p>I went there as an undergrad.</p>
<p>If you like NY, I believe Columbia has pretty good EECS.</p>
<p>^Yup. The Fu Foundation School of Engineering & Applied Sciences.</p>
<p>Columbia's EE grad ranking isnt as high I think</p>
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It's certainly the most grad students of any department at MIT
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<p>That is, unless you're counting the Sloan School, which brings in about 400 new MBA students every year. And that's actually pretty small, relative to other top MBA programs.</p>
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[quote]
That is, unless you're counting the Sloan School, which brings in about 400 new MBA students every year.
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<p>I stand corrected...I misread a comment on the EECS website. School of Engineering != all the departments.</p>
<p>if there is certain criteria defining a min. of 3.6 gpa?
can’t a one having 2.96 can apply for enrollment to ms at mit or any other equivalent good school. wt are the options available ?</p>
<p>if work ex. in a job concerned to electrical field can help me getting into MS with above mentioned gpa i.e. 2.96</p>