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10 answers

MIT, CalTech, Stanford, Georgia Tech are the big ones. Better be really smart if you want to get into the first 3. Georgia tech isn't as hard to get into mainly because they have more students. In reality it doesn't matter that much were you go for your undergraduate. Graduate school is the where the school makes the biggest difference.

The best engineering school is most likely in India. They have the best engineering schools in the world. Alot of people have MIT and CalTech as back ups for the schools in India. I had a teacher form India and the school he went to required that you get 3 bachelors degrees at once. Also he said that general physics lasts 2 semesters but you take one big test at the end to determine your grade. It covered physics 1 and 2. You could never do that in the USA because almost all students would fail.

2006-07-11 18:09:50 · answer #1 · answered by DoctaB01 2 · 2 0

Which have the best reputation or which are really the best? Sometimes its more about what you want out of the school than simply going to a particular school. Would anyone really care if you graduate from MIT if your grades aren't up to par? Maybe, maybe not. Also, some universities have special grants or focus. Do you want to specialize in robotics or computer or something else?

Every year magazines publish lists of the "best" colleges. Those are a good start, but sometimes it might be the "best" college in your home state that makes attending college affordable.

Personally, I'm for Purdue, but I'm an alumnus. MIT and many other schools are excellent as well.

2006-07-11 14:04:05 · answer #2 · answered by Mack Man 5 · 0 0

Personally, I favor the University of Missouri - Rolla (UMR). But aside from that, whatever school you go to for engineering should meet a few criteria:

1. It should have ABET accreditation.
2. It should offer the engineering discipline you are interested in.
3. It should be within your budget and located in a place you want to live for four or more years.

Also, the prestige of the school is not nearly as important for an undergraduate degree. It would be better to attend a prestigious school for your graduate degree.

2006-07-11 15:44:11 · answer #3 · answered by SkyWayGuy 3 · 0 0

Depends on what you want to do. If you want to be a professor or work in research, then MIT or Berkeley are pretty much tops. Next come alot of Big 10 schools. Plus on top of that you have to do well.

If you just want to be an engineer, then just pick something affordable and do well at it. Learn the material and be a good engineer.

2006-07-11 14:47:48 · answer #4 · answered by cw 3 · 0 0

There isn't a best university for electrical engineers. There is a best university for YOU. You have to go visit them and see where you fit in.

2006-07-11 13:31:58 · answer #5 · answered by gunghoiguana 2 · 0 0

Indonesia and Thailand are solid selections for a constrained funds, yet as someone earlier reported, if the son is going to ITB, he ought to study Bahasa Indonesia first. ITB's EE branch wouldn't have a international software yet. formerly the son flow vacation and had to study new language, why no longer evaluate scholarship as an option? i'm a scholarship scholar and my previous due father became taken aback even as he became suggested that he in basic terms ought to pay my residing association and allowance. ;-)

2016-10-14 09:14:20 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

For undergrad:
Rose-Hulman Inst. of Tech. (IN)
Cooper Union (NY)
Harvey Mudd College (CA)

For grad:
1. Massachusetts Inst. of Technology (MA)
2. Stanford University (CA)
3. University of California–Berkeley (CA)

2006-07-11 16:16:29 · answer #7 · answered by Phil Mack 2 · 0 0

ga tech is a very nice engineering school, mit and caltech are also very nice

2006-07-11 13:21:21 · answer #8 · answered by murat j 2 · 0 0

MIT or Cal Tech

2006-07-11 13:02:43 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

MIT

2006-07-11 13:02:25 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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