Rank The EE Undergrad Programs in the Following Colleges

<p>According to Co Ops, Research, Rigor(Looking for Rigorous) , Repuatation and etc...</p>

<ol>
<li>UCB</li>
<li>Georgia Tech</li>
<li>U Mich </li>
<li>UCSD</li>
<li>UCLA</li>
<li>Cal Poly SLO</li>
<li>Purdue</li>
<li>UIUC</li>
<li>U Texas</li>
<li>Penn State</li>
<li>Rose Hulman</li>
</ol>

<p>They are all top 25 Electrical Engineering, but those rankings are very biased. So I was wondering if you CC'ers can rank these schools in any appropriate manner.</p>

<p>Thank you!</p>

<p>Why would any individual posting here have less bias than the rankings you’ve already looked at?</p>

<p>I have no clue</p>

<p>The ASEE has very in-depth profiles of engineering schools. Spend some time looking over all their data on each of your schools to learn more. For each school, there is a huge menu on the left of content or there is the Print Entire Profile option on the right to put all the data on one huge page for you to scroll through…
[ASEE.org</a> - ASEE - Publications - College Profiles - Search the Profiles](<a href=“http://profiles.asee.org/]ASEE.org”>http://profiles.asee.org/)</p>

<p>You probably have your own preferences that should be applied to make a ranking specific to you.</p>

<p>Because there are many state universities in your list, are any of them in your state of residency? Have you checked the net price of each school to see if they are affordable? Those which are too expensive should be removed from the list for a quick first screen.</p>

<p>All of them are about the same. OOS hahaha. Sucks for me.</p>

<p>If you are paying out of state list price, Cal Poly is probably the least expensive.</p>

<p>As a New York resident, why not just go to Stony Brook?</p>

<p>Ofcourse Stony and Bing are safeties. </p>

<p>My brother attends Stony too :).</p>

<p>EE is a wide, wide, wide field. You might start by looking at sub specialties if you know what area you want to study, as well as degree requirements. Some programs are better at some rather than others. Also, some programs require you take a least one course in every sub specialty, even if you have no intention of ever working in that area, others let you take courses only in your area once you get beyond the basics. (And sometimes honors students get an exemption while everyone else doesn’t.) There’s a big difference between the two.</p>

<p>Bing is not a safety. It’s a match</p>

<p>Just be aware that, as an undergraduate, at the larger schools you are likely to have 100+ people in your core classes. Rose Hulman is very small–totally different experience. You might want to look at Olin also.</p>

<p>For crying out loud, why does everything on these forums need to be ranked??</p>

<p>Any of those schools would make a fine choice. Pick the one that you think fits your interests/personality the best and go with it.</p>