<p>1) I would like to study engineering, but I am open to other possibilities
2) I am interested in art and design as well (not as a major though, more of a hobby/elective)
3) I will be a varsity athlete in college
4) I want to be very involved in an outdoors club type thing
5) I am not a super genius by any means. i'm not even nearly the best math student at my school. i'm just intelligent and i work hard. i want to go someplace where I will not be overwhelmed by the work, get a phenomenal education, and have a classic awesome college experience. </p>
<p>note, i am not asking for chances, assume i've gotten in to all three. where should i go?</p>
Since you’re a “hard worker” it’s difficult to gauge what would overwhelm you. But that become much easier when you’re considering playing a college sport. You can cross MIT off your list, it’s the workload from hell even without a sport and, depending on how hard you want to work, Cornell Engineering off it too.</p>
<p>…And you can’t apply to Brown because I don’t want any competition ;P</p>
<p>First get into all 3. Then worry about where you should go. I’d be very impressed if you or anyone can even make it to 1 of them. 2 could arguably be pushing your luck. Arguably.</p>
<p>These 3 schools are the real deal. Big names that will impress anyone. Good luck.</p>
<p>I’ve already gotten into 2 of the schools, so thanks! Can someone just give me some firsthand insight on the actual schools? Something I can’t find through google/guessing? I’ve already searched CC for a thread with these three schools about engineering and I couldn’t find any, other wise I wouldn’t be asking! I didn’t post this to be sassed</p>
<p>Do not go into engineering at MIT or Cornell if this is the case. Brown maybe. The other 4 questions make me lean towards Cornell. Engineering is mega intense at MIT and Cornell. It probably is at Brown as well, but not to the same degree. Cornell and MIT are particularly known for engineering.</p>