UMich vs. Cornell grad school

<p>So I have been admitted to both University of Michigan and Cornell for Computer Engineering graduate school. I am getting guaranteed funding from both places for at least five years, so really no financial issues there. But I am still having a hard time making a decision, so I am looking for some opinions.</p>

<p>I visited both Ann Arbor and Ithaca. I live in the mid-west now, so I really loved AA. I am not big into the social scene, but it seems like a town where a lot goes on. On the contrary, Ithaca's smallness didn't really appeal to me. It seems a very isolated town, and somewhat underdeveloped. I loved the campus, but the town itself seems dreary, and I can't imagine how one could live there. </p>

<p>The dilemma is that I know a couple professors at Cornell that I could definitely work with, they are doing almost exactly what I want to research in. One of the professors is really well known in his field. There's a larger selection of professors at Michigan, but so far, I have not been able to find someone that exactly fits what I want to do. There are a few professors at Michigan that are also well known. I am a very adaptable person, so if I go to Michigan, I am hoping either my tastes will change or that I will be able to reach a compromise with a professor on a research project that I would enjoy. Does anyone have any experience like this, where you didn't really have a firm idea, but everything worked out at the end?</p>

<p>Of course, then there are other things like rankings, UMich is slightly ranked better. I found UMich to be a very friendly place and could see myself fitting in. A little harder for me to see that at Ithaca. But I don't want to base the decision solely on location either. I am used to the cold and snow, but driving in all those steep hills in Ithaca scares me. And things are also very expensive there, being a private school and all.</p>

<p>While I am leaning mostly towards UMich, the fact that I am going to have to work a little harder to find a professor is holding me back a little. Any thoughts would be great. Thanks in advance.</p>

<p>“While I am leaning mostly towards UMich, the fact that I am going to have to work a little harder to find a professor is holding me back a little. Any thoughts would be great.”</p>

<p>Work a little harder and go to Michigan. ;-)</p>

<p>Grad school is extremely rigorous, keeping one’s sanity is important specifically by finding identities beyond being a grad student. On the other hand having good advising is really they key and if Cornell is the better intellectual fit I would opt for there UNLESS you can be a bit flexible and veer your work with someone at Michigan. i’ve had friends who have taken the best offer but with no one to work with and it was tough even with funding.</p>