<p>I am a student at a South Florida Community College with a really good GPA (3.90) and good chances of transferring to either of these three Universities but I don't know which I want to go to the most. Oh, my major is Chemical Engineering!</p>
<p>I'm not interested at all in sports unless it's Badminton (which I play occasionally and recreationally).
I am not at all a party girl...I don't see the fun in waking up disoriented and stinking of my own vomit.
I'm used to a big city and I'd love to continue in one.
I'd love a very diverse campus and city. </p>
<p>I know UF is the BEST school in Florida as well as the best for Chemical Engineering but I'm afraid I'll be stuck in central florida taking unnecessarily difficult classes.
I don't know much about FSU...
USF seems to be a good school except that students say faculty is impossible to reach and that the schools does't seem to care much about the students.</p>
<p>Could you guys give me some advice and insight into these universities?
thanks!</p>
<p>As far as what I’ve heard, UF is THE best in Florida for engineering. If I were you, I’d go with them. UCF is also good though too, so no worries.</p>
<p>Florida State shares its College of Engineering with Florida A&M, which may be less expensive and/or have better merit scholarships – basically, this is an arbitrage situation for an engineering major considering either school.</p>
<p>The shared College of Engineering appears to be a short distance away from both main campuses on mapping web sites.</p>
<p>Hahaha, yeah it looks like University of Miami takes that spot. However, most rankings do put UF above my other FL options.</p>
<p>But I think I’ve made up my mind. If I have to go to a FL university it’s going to be UF, second choice USF, last choice FSU. </p>
<p>However, I’ve been looking at other places out of state…I’m really hoping for out of state, but if I can’t afford it then UF is by far the best option for me. I understand now that a more difficult curriculum is going to make for a great future engineer and I’d love to join the gator nation.</p>
<p>If FSU is on your application list for junior transfer to engineering, you may want to put FAMU on your application list as well. Same engineering school, may be less expensive.</p>
<p>No, I haven’t really run any net price calculators mainly because they always ask for my parents’ information…Do these calculators also work for married students? My husband only recently started making $36,000 a year after being unemployed for a few months and I don’t have a job. Every time I go through a university’s financial aid website all I read is about parents, parents, parents… </p>
<p>but I’d be able to afford no more than $10,000 a year, and that’s already pushing the limit.</p>
<p>I haven’t really looked into FAMU yet but I will.</p>
<p>Since you are married, you should be able to use the independent student net price calculators, rather than the dependent student net price calculator.</p>
<p>I just used the Expected Family Contribution Calculator for Independent Students at **************.com and it says that my EFC is about $7696. I guess that’s a reasonable estimate. </p>
<p>The one from UF is telling me i’d have to pay about $10,000 and the one from FSU says I’d have to pay $17,000…sigh…I’ll just have to wait untill I apply and get accepted to get the actual figures :(</p>
<p>I’m looking into Cornell University…their calculator said I’d only have to pay $5000 and do $2000 in self help. I think I have a chance at getting accepted!
High School GPA unweighted 3.83 and weighted 4.4
College GPA 3.9
SATs 1770 (Reading 600, Math 590, Writing 580)
what do you think?</p>
<p>Your college GPA should give you good chances at universities that accept significant numbers of transfers and disregard stuff from high school, but your SAT may hurt you at highly selective universities that do consider stuff from high school. If you are ready to transfer at the junior level (instead of sophomore level), then your stuff from high school is likely to considered less or not considered at all – check your transfer target universities.</p>