<p>Princeton</a> University - Princeton professors elected to the National Academy of Engineering
National</a> Academy Of Engineering Elects 68 Members And Nine Foreign Associates
National</a> Academy of Engineering (NAE) - Home</p>
<p>Like the National Academy of Sciences, the National Academy of Engineering is the nation's most respected organization of leaders in their field. Election to the NAE is a high honor and reflects the esteem in which these individuals are held by their colleagues. </p>
<p>This year, MIT and Berkeley led the nation with five new members each. Carnegie Mellon had three and Princeton along with CalTech, Cornell, Stanford and the U. of Maryland had two. (More information about Princeton's new members can be found in the article linked above and on the Princeton Engineering website linked below.)</p>
<p>2010 New National Academy of Engineering Members</p>
<p>5---MIT and Berkeley
3---Carnegie Mellon
2---Princeton, CalTech, Cornell, Stanford and the U. of Maryland</p>
<p>2010 New NAE Members in the Ivies</p>
<p>2---Princeton and Cornell
1---Harvard and Brown</p>
<p>Nationwide, MIT and Stanford easily lead in the total number of NAE members. Princeton and Cornell share the honor of having the 8th highest number and by far the largest number in the Ivy League. Among the Ivies, Harvard and Columbia also have a respectable number.</p>
<p>Nationwide Leading Schools</p>
<p>115---MIT
92----Stanford
78----Berkeley</p>
<p>48----U. of Texas
31----CalTech
29----U. of Illinois
26----Georgia Tech
25----Princeton, Cornell, Carnegie Mellon
22----U. of Michigan, USC, UC Santa Barbara,
20----Northwestern, U. of Wisconsin, UC San Diego
19----Harvard, Purdue, UCLA
16----U. of Minnesota, U. of Washington</p>
<p>Within the Ivy League</p>
<p>25----Princeton and Cornell</p>
<p>19----Harvard
16----Columbia</p>
<p>9-----Penn
6-----Yale
4-----Brown
3-----Dartmouth</p>
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<p>For those interested in studying engineering at Princeton, more information can be found here:</p>
<p>Princeton</a> Engineering</p>