Looking for additional schools

<p>I've already applied ED and rolling and I need a little help picking some additional schools to apply to. I am interested in Biomedical Engineering and Business.</p>

<p>I go to a Top 50 Ranked New York public high school on long island and my average is 92.3. My school neither ranks nor weights.
AP Classes
Sophomore Year:
European History AP - 3</p>

<p>Junior Year:
Physics B AP - 3
English Language and Composition AP - 3
Latin Vergil AP - 3
US History AP - 4</p>

<p>Senior Year:
Physics C AP (both exams)
Biology AP
Economics AP (macro and micro)
Calculus BC AP
English Literature AP </p>

<p>SATs:
CR: 700 Math: 780 Writing: 630
1480 Composite</p>

<p>SATIIs:
Biology: 640
Physics: 680
Math 2C: 720
US History: 700
Latin: 710</p>

<p>My current list of colleges:
NYU
Binghamton
BU
Carnegie Mellon
Duke
Harvey Mudd
John's Hopkins
Northwestern
RPI
Wash. U
Columbia University
Georgetown
Tufts</p>

<p>Can anyone suggest any other Business or Engineering schools? Thanks in advance.</p>

<p>That's a great list. You've done a good job. Sit back and wait for the thick envelopes to arrive. Michigan, Rochester, Dartmouth, and Cornell?</p>

<p>Is it my imagination, or are there going to be WAY too many biomedical engineers in a few years?</p>

<p>he already applied to Cornell ED and Umich</p>

<p>I think that collegeconfidential represents a disproportionate number of biomedical engineers and that there really aren't too many, although the field is growing.</p>

<p>i think that CC is disproportinate in many more factors than one.</p>

<p>The United States doesn't haven enough engineers. The number of engineers coming out of Asia are growing much faster than those in the US and can be a problem here in the US in the near future.</p>

<p>At least ocassionally I would like to see a poster state preferences for what he/she is looking for in a college. The stat driven obsession is mind-numbing. LOL.</p>

<p>How about U of Pitt?</p>

<p>I've noticed that the stat-driven posts tend to be people interested in engineering and business--fields that attract people who have great faith in numbers. But even people in other fields (e.g., history) seem to think that it's a no-brainer that a school with a history department ranked #10 in the country would be better for them than a school with the #14 history department.</p>