liberal arts

<p>I have just begun my college search and was wondering what are some liberal art schools that have prettygood-amazing engineering programs, I have briefly heard of Bucknell U but idk if the person saying this was factual. </p>

<p>Thank you for your help</p>

<p>Swarthmore, Lafayette, Union are the only others besides Bucknell that I know of that offer engineering. Most LACs have 3-2 programs with schools that offer engineering, but think you would be better off just attending a school with engineering than pursuing this option.</p>

<p>Harvey Mudd</p>

<p>Trinity College (CT)</p>

<p>Wow. I'm surprised you have not heard of Harvey Mudd College.</p>

<p>HARVEY FREAKING MUDD! COME HERE NOW!</p>

<p>Harvey Mudd
really good education</p>

<p>they have scholarships too</p>

<p>hard to get into though</p>

<p>If you're a girl, look at Smith.</p>

<p>I have heard of Harvey Mudd, but really know nothing about it and didn't really think of it as a LAC, or, at least, not in the traditional sense; so I guess it didn't register. However, I had no idea that Trinity had engineering.</p>

<p>Remember, Harvey Mudd is part of the Claremont Consortium (Pomona, Claremont McKenna, Harvey Mudd, Pitzer and Scripps) in California.</p>

<p>Another option worth investigating if you want a no-compromise liberal arts education with superb engineering is Dartmouth's dual degree (3-2) program. You spend two years at one of about 20 affiliated LACs, do your junior year in engineering at Dartmouth, then return to graduate with your class. The fifth year is spent at Dartmouth and you wind up with two degrees and can go right into Dartmouth's or other grad engineering program. It takes some advanced planning to pull off, but is the best of both worlds.</p>

<p><a href="http://engineering.dartmouth.edu/thayer/academicsadmissions/undergrad-dual.html%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://engineering.dartmouth.edu/thayer/academicsadmissions/undergrad-dual.html&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>