<p>This ranking made me incredibly depressed… knowing I have no chance of getting into MIT, CalTech, or even VTech…■■■. I wish I could start over.</p>
<p>I know this thread is a little old,
but can anybody please post the full (past top 20) rankings for</p>
<p>undergrad
aerospace/aeronautical engineering</p>
<p>because I probably won’t get into the top 20 =)</p>
<p>Does anyone have rankings for undergraduate and graduate Biomedical Engineering ranks past Top 20? </p>
<p>Thanks!!</p>
<p>How the heck is Penn State and UC Davis ABOVE Rice?</p>
<p>Any list of undergrad engr without Calpoly SLO or Rose Holman is not worth the paper is printed on - this one has neither.</p>
<p>They’re both schools that don’t offer a PhD, and thus they are not on that list. However, Rose Hulman is Top 2 and Cal Poly SLO is in the Top 5 in their catagory.</p>
<p>To address an earlier concern (from last year, I believe) about “impacted” majors such as at Berkeley…another school with this issue is University of Illinois. GREAT engineering school, but it has the drawback of making it difficult to change majors, even within engineering. You have to apply and be accepted to the new major, and if you want to change to a major that is oversubscribed, you’re out of luck.</p>
<p>At most schools, it’s just a matter of filling out paperwork and welcome to your new major.</p>
<p>And I recall seeing a list of the “top 5” CS schools (not sure who compiled it) and IIRC the top 5 were MIT, Caltech, Carnegie-Mellon?, maybe Stanford?, and U of Illinois (UIUC) was definitely #5.</p>
<p>Apart from UIUC, what other schools make it difficult to change majors?</p>
<p>UC Berkeley</p>
<p>i’d like to further the thing about impacted majors… with respect to that do you mean like the major you apply for(in your application process), or the major you select after a 2 or 3 semesters, because I really think that only after getting a feel of different majors at the campus can you make a decision to what major you most fit into??
and does Georgia Tech have impacted majors? which other engineering schools in the top 10 would you say have impacted majors?</p>
<p>Don’t know the answer to your question but some schools really do encourage you to explore different majors. At the information sessions for Purdue, U of Cincinnati, and Rose-Hulman I recall them saying “Well, all the engineering students take basically the same courses freshman year anyway, so you don’t really have to choose a major until sophomore year.” Or words to that effect.</p>
<p>Hi. Can anyone post US news graduate school rankings(2009 or 2010) for Electrical Engineering. Please post all top 100 schools.</p>
<p>I’m between Drexel and Rutgers, but both have almost the same rankings :(</p>
<p>I am looking for a list of schools ranked by branch of engineering they are famous for. If there is one on this forum, can some one point me to it…</p>
<p>Never mind- Found it!</p>
<p>Don’t we have the latest ranking?say 2010?</p>
<p>except MIT,stanford and IVYs which engineering unis provide good aid to internationals?? Plz Help! (aid=need based/merit based anything but around full aid)</p>
<p>UC San Diego is listed under Civil (undergrad), but they don’t even offer Civil…</p>
<p>UCSD has structural engineering. Perhaps they included it as Civil? My friend is in the program and he said it is pretty intense.</p>
<p>Don’t we have the latest ranking?say 2010?</p>