Party Engineering School

<p>I'm looking for a party school with a good engineering program....</p>

<p>Any ideas?</p>

<p>Bucknell. Great engineering program and party school. It is smaller, about 3600 students, but they work and play hard.</p>

<p>SUNY Buffalo, UMass Amherst, University of Delaware, University of Maryland</p>

<p>Delaware and Maryland aren’t total party schools, but you can definately party there.</p>

<p>Caltech???</p>

<p>Purdue, Illinois, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Michigan…basically most Big Ten schools.</p>

<p>Cornell and Lehigh come to mind…</p>

<p>Purdue was the first one that came to mind for me… good engineering, college town, school spirit… you get the idea. </p>

<p>And as jotajota said, most other Big Ten schools.</p>

<p>out of the typically named schools on party school lists, here are the ones strong in engineering:</p>

<p>Penn State - University Park
University of Florida
University of Texas - Austin
University of Wisconsin - Madison
University of California - Santa Barbara
University of Colorado - Boulder
University of Iowa
Union College
University of Tennessee
Arizona State University</p>

<p>Lehigh, Virginia Tech, NC State, Duke</p>

<p>N…c…state!</p>

<p>university of texas!!!
hook em</p>

<p>In response to curiouslee:</p>

<p>No, definitely not Caltech. </p>

<p>As people have suggested, large state schools are your best bet.</p>

<p>Haha, MIT is actually most of the party scene in Boston…though I wouldn’t consider us a party school…</p>

<p>UCSB; its a total party school & it has a pretty good engineering program</p>

<p>For the combination it’s hard to beat the University of Wisconsin-Madison.</p>

<p>maybe harvey mudd, cuz you have access to all the claremont parties at cmc?</p>

<p>University of Michigan</p>

<p>It would appear that engineers know how to party.</p>

<p>You may want to think seriously about your priorities. Party school atmosphere and engineering typically don’t mix very well at least if you expect to graduate. </p>

<p>A school like Michigan may be your best bet with decent graduation rates in engineering. Even at a school like Purdue, four out of five students drop out of electrical engineering/computer science before graduation. And the one fifth of the engineering class that graduated was probably the one that did NOT party!</p>

<p>If you can really cut it, you shouldn’t dismiss MIT. Zero drop out rate in engineering and they were even listed as a top 20 party school by Playboy Magazine a few years back. The fraternities certainly do know how to party. You won’t get much sleep though!</p>

<p>Bucknell, Lehigh</p>