<p>I have searched and searched and I'm still utterly confused.. I need a list of schools with undergraduate petroleum engineering in the US. I looked at the Society of Petroleum Engineer's list but it's mixed with alot of masters programs instead of undergrad. Please help me with this! Also to engineers out there. Would a double major in geology and mechanical engineering accomplish the same knowledge? Is this an affect on jobs being able to obtain? Thank you for your time.</p>
<p>Look at this list comparing salaries of petroleum engineering majors from various schools:
[PayScale</a> - Petroleum Engineer Salary, Average Salaries by School](<a href=“http://www.payscale.com/research/US/Job=Petroleum_Engineer/Salary/by_School]PayScale”>Petroleum Engineer Salary in 2023 | PayScale)</p>
<p>UofC and UofA. Come to Canada its way better I promise.</p>
<p>While a degree in geology or mechanical could get you hired to work at an oil/natural gas company, it will not be the same position as a petroleum engineer. Below is a list of accredited universities in the US offering PetE as an undergrad major. Hope this helps.</p>
<p>University of Alaska Fairbanks ,AK, United States<br>
Colorado School of Mines ,CO, United States<br>
The University of Kansas ,KS, United States<br>
University of Louisiana at Lafayette ,LA, United States<br>
Louisiana State University and A&M College ,LA, United States
Marietta College ,OH, United States<br>
Missouri University of Science and Technology ,MO, United States<br>
Montana Tech of the University of Montana ,MT, United States<br>
New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology ,NM, United States<br>
University of Oklahoma ,OK, United States<br>
Pennsylvania State University ,PA, United States<br>
Texas A & M University ,TX, United States<br>
University of Texas at Austin ,TX, United States<br>
Texas Tech University ,TX, United States<br>
The University of Tulsa ,OK, United States<br>
West Virginia University ,WV, United States<br>
University of Wyoming ,WY, United States</p>
<p>i am new here.i wish to know if the university of tulsa is a good school to get a Bsc in petroleum engineering.has it got a good reputation?</p>
<p>Basically any of these school will get you a job granted you meet the academic and experience requirements. Some school focus on different areas of the industry, so you may look further into that. Some are definitely more well known than others.</p>
<p>As far as Texas, Texas A&M University is the place to be fore pete! I have a ton of friends doing petroleum engineering, and from what I know it’s one of the best undergrad programs in Texas (and nation so I’ve heard). It’s highly competitive and a large work load but it’s manageable when taken seriously I believe. </p>
<p>I’m a geology major at A&M too, and as far as a double major with any engineering I don’t think they would even allow you to try. I think it would just be extremely taxing and I’m not sure they’d let you risk it. I know people minoring in geology though, that seems to be common. </p>
<p>It would be good to have a geology minor coupled with engineering when looking for jobs afterwards, especially in the gas and oil industry.</p>
<p>Louisiana resident here. Texas A&M, Texas Tech, University of Tulsa, Rice University, University of Louisiana Lafayette, LSU, and maybe Tulane still because of the name recognition. The other Oklahoma universities will probably do well for you, too. Texas A&M has an amazing alumni network and kids we know who’ve gone there have great internships just after their freshman year. Texas Tech and UL-Laf are not as well known, but there are lots of people working in the industry in both Texas and Louisiana who have degrees from there. I think both are hidden gems. For instance, in the computer industry, UL-Laf is known to have an outstanding computer program. You may not have the big name sports at Laf and Texas Tech, but connections to the industry are very good.</p>