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Barb B
09-18-2009, 09:14 AM
Would love imput on smaller colleges with great engineering programs. I like the idea of not being in an engineering or physics class of over 100 kides. I would love your suggestions as it has been hard to google.

Barb

Osmosis Mom
09-18-2009, 09:26 AM
Check out Clarkson UNiversity in Potsdam, NY. Great school, nice, quiet town, verrrry cold winters.

Also, there is a newer, small school here in MA called Olin. Looks attractive.

JoyfulMama
09-18-2009, 09:28 AM
WPI (Worcester Polytechnic Institute) in Worcester, MA
I had a few friends go there, and they loved the smaller feel.

Also, Lafayette College in Easton, PA. (Surpassed Lehigh University on the most recent rankings I believe.)

Brenda in MA
09-18-2009, 11:34 AM
Union College in Schenectady,NY is a liberal arts college that has accredited engineering programs in these two fields. All classes are taught by professors (no TAs teaching), and all seniors have to do a research project and present it at a symposium.

We toured there last year and ds heavily considered it, but in the end he wasn't sure he wanted either mechanical or electrical engineering, so he went elsewhere.

One other place I keep hearing mentioned is Rose Hulman. I think it's in Indiana, but I don't know much else about it.

HTH,
Brenda

aggieamy
09-18-2009, 12:31 PM
Would love imput on smaller colleges with great engineering programs. I like the idea of not being in an engineering or physics class of over 100 kides. I would love your suggestions as it has been hard to google.

Barb

I went to a VERY large engineering school but it's been my experience that the only large class sizes I had were in the basic freshman classes. All my upper level engineering and science classes were all less than 40. Freshman calculus though ... that was a big one.

LMA
09-18-2009, 01:11 PM
University of Rhode Island for Electrical Engineering has small classes.
University of Massachusetts at Dartmouth has a co-op program that is very competitive with Northeastern U. in Boston. My neighbor's son went tuition-free to UMass Dartmouth, got field experience at three different companies. He graduated at the top of his engineering class in May. He was offered two different positions and he took a huge job with a huge corporation with a huge salary, way, way above the average starting salary with a bachelor's degree in EE. He worked very hard and he has no school debt.

Sharon in MD
09-18-2009, 11:26 PM
If you are looking on the east coast....Lafayette could be really nice...it was one of our top picks. They really emphasize the Renaissance man type of program. They are truly liberal arts with a great engineering school to boot. They have excellent prof to student relationships. If ds had wanted Mech e or EE or Chem E. we would have strongly encouraged him to go there. It is also a beautiful campus. think images of ivy covered hallowed halls....it looks like a college should look.

We visited Olin. I think it WILL be a great school. I loved it, but I was uncomfortable with their new status....If your kid is a jr or sr....well I would just be a little bit more careful because they are so new. Others may disagree with me, but I feel that they are excellent and creating a new model....I just wasn't comfortable with being in something that new and unproven. I DO think they are AWESOME. But...they are also skimming off the very top kids... Also...if your child is looking for something with advanced labs available, they didn't have it as of last year.

UMBC in Maryland, (University of Maryland Baltimore County) has a fantastic engineering school....it is truly competitive with UMD College Park. They have an excellent scholars program that welcomes homeshooled kids. My son was accepted into it...but decided to go elsewhere. Look into the Meyerhoff Scholars program. It is truly an exceptional program and I would recommend it without hesitation. My best friend's son is in it as well. These kids are cream of the crop and GOING somewhere. If you want more particulars...pm me.

In the category of co-op schools....not really a small school,more mid sized..2000 freshmen admitted this year and 900 of them engineers....DREXEL in philly. I think they were ranked 89 in US News and World Report and #4 in the up and comers category. This is where our son decided to go. It fits him and I hope and pray it will continue to fit him. They have good scholarships and fantastic....make that FANTASTIC research opportunities for their students....all the way down to the lowly freshman. Ds has been there less than 5 days and has already driven a scanning electron microscope. UMD told me he would have to be a grad student to even touch theirs. He is already working on a fracture analysis project about why a computer fan blade broke and how it broke. Whatever field of engineering your kid is interested in they WILL put them in research right away if that is what they want to do. That was the key for us.

They are also a coop school....takes a minimum of 5 years to get the BS, but you also graduate with 18 months real work experience. They also have a 5 year bs/ms program which has 12 months real work experience...you lose one coop to grad level work.

We also visited Grove City, RPI, Lehigh, UMD college Park and looked into JHU, Carnegie Mellon, Case Western.....I feel like I'm forgetting one....oh well...

i hope this helps...please feel free to followup

Gwen in VA
09-19-2009, 07:43 AM
Yes -- which engineering field he is planning on going into can make a HUGE difference as to which school is a good fit for him.

Ds2 is very interested in a small engineering school, but he wants to go into naval architecture (Webb Institute!) or aero-astro, which almost precludes all small engineering schools!

Sharon in MD
09-19-2009, 08:57 AM
Alex wanted Materials Science....Schools had to be big enough to have nano level labs and plasma and and and...

Actually, UMBC did not have that but the Meyerhoff Scholars program is a pre-PHD program, so that is why it stayed on the list. It opens virtually any Phd door you could imagine for the students.

Margaret in CO
09-19-2009, 09:31 PM
Usna
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usmma

Starr
09-19-2009, 10:20 PM
I was going to mention Clarkson as well.

Heather in AL
09-22-2009, 08:48 AM
Have you considered UAHuntsville (formerly called UAH)? It's a branch of the University of Alabama system located in Huntsville, Alabama up near the Tennessee line.

UAH is known for it's engineers. In fact, it seems to me that is *what* they are known for.... popping out engineers. It's a very good school with only one or two lecture hall type classes; the rest are normal sized ones. It's a smallish school with a smallish feel. A bonus of attending UAH is that Huntsville has the second largest Research Park in the nation (it could be first now, but I'm not sure), so the co-op opportunities are endless. NASA, Boeing, Northrup Grumman, etc, etc. See my link below for the city's link to view some of the businesses located here. There is everything from defense to internet pioneers to genetics. Companies actively recruit engineer students for co-op opportunities as well as internships.

Huntsville is a safe city that is close to larger cities.... two hours will put us in either Nashville, Birmimgham, Chattanooga, Tn, and 3 1/2 hours will put us in Atlanta. Six will get us to the beach. Two years ago, we drove to Houston in 12.

Take a peek if you are interested:
About the college: http://www.uah.edu/
About the city: http://www.hsvcity.com/

HTH!

Kendall
09-22-2009, 10:00 AM
University of Tulsa. private university. 4000 students. The professors teach the classes. We were impressed with it. Expensive! They give a full ride scholarship to some National Merit Finalist; I have no idea about their aid beyond that.

OH Kim
09-25-2009, 03:07 PM
What's your idea of small? Case Western Reserve's freshman class is less than 1100 students. Rennselaer undergrad is less than 6K students. Rose-Hulman in Terra Haute, IN, has less than 2K undergrad students.

Chris in VA
09-28-2009, 11:03 AM
My son is interested in the 3/2 engineering program--Radford University in VA and VA Tech team up to give you a 5 year program. When completed, the student graduates with 2 BS degrees--one in Physics and one in Engineering. More details at the Radford University website. This is brand new to us, so we are still investigating. Radford doesn't seem too hard to get in to, but I don't know about the specific program.

StephanieZ
11-15-2009, 09:19 PM
Olin is exceptional, and it is small.

LibraryLover
11-15-2009, 10:00 PM
Lafayette in PA.

Sebastian (a lady)
11-18-2009, 01:23 AM
Usna
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usafa
uacga
usmma

I can't speak for the other schools but USNA have very small classes. I think the largest class I was ever in was freshman chemistry, which had three sections together for lecture (about 60-90 students) but labs that were just one section at a time (20-30).

Most of my classes were 30 or fewer. Majors classes were often far smaller.

I wasn't an engineering major, but I think the pattern holds across the departments.

I frequently had upper level majors classes that were fewer than a dozen. A couple language classes were fewer than eight. One only had four students and met at a table in the library.

The downside to academy engineering is that you often end up doing something non-engineering related after graduation. On the other hand, you get incredible leadership (managerial) experience. As a new grad, I was supervising a 25 person division as well as standing engineering officer of the watch for my ship. Within two years I was a qualified bridge watchstander and was standing weekend duty as command duty officer, where I was responsible for the safety of the ship in the captain's absence. It's not for everyone. But when it is a match, it is a great opportunity.

avdelp
11-22-2009, 04:26 PM
I also recommend checking into the University of Tulsa (especially since you're in TX). My husband and are are both Tulsa alums and he has a Mechanical Engineering degree. Tulsa is truly known for its engineering. We both loved our 4 years there. Being private, it is quite expensive, though. There is scholarship money.

I also recommend Grove City College. They have a fantastic engineering program also. My daughter has applied their Early Decision and we're waiting to hear. :)