I'd love to see him end up at Minnesota, but you can't fault a kid who says:
“I’m going to school more for the education, and I’ll go as far as I have to to get a good education.”
He seems to have his head screwed on right.
I've gotta agree with this. I would choose any of those programs over Minnesota if academics were a priority...especially if he is doing engineering.
You would be wrong. Depending on the engineering field, Minnesota is as good, if not better, than all of those schools. Just as an FYI, Harvard engineering sucks. For ChemE, Stanford & Minnesota are top tier options to pick from; how you'd play football and have the time and energy to devote to the coursework is beyond me. As far as MechE, Stanford IS in the top tier, where NU and the U of M are the next level down but still excellent. This kid has some great options; there's really not a bad choice among them. Go where it feels right, work hard, and make the most of the opportunity.
FWIW, the most brilliant engineers I know and have worked with are from the following schools:
MIT
UPenn
Illinois
Minnesota
WisconsinPenn St
Rice
Oklahoma
I've also known absolutely terrible engineers from:
Minnesota
Princeton
Harvard
Virginia Tech
Stanford
MIT
(goes to show you that where you go isn't as important as how talented and hard-working you are)
Awful tough to fault a kid for choosing to go to Stanford or Northwestern, or even Harvard if he's getting a package from them. It's one thing to lose a kid to another state school degree factory that may be arbitrarily higher ranked in some BS rankings. It's another when schools like that are in the mix.
You would be wrong. Depending on the engineering field, Minnesota is as good, if not better, than all of those schools. Just as an FYI, Harvard engineering sucks. For ChemE, Stanford & Minnesota are top tier options to pick from; how you'd play football and have the time and energy to devote to the coursework is beyond me. As far as MechE, Stanford IS in the top tier, where NU and the U of M are the next level down but still excellent. This kid has some great options; there's really not a bad choice among them. Go where it feels right, work hard, and make the most of the opportunity.
FWIW, the most brilliant engineers I know and have worked with are from the following schools:
MIT
UPenn
Illinois
Minnesota
Wisconsin
Penn St
Rice
Oklahoma
I've also known absolutely terrible engineers from:
Minnesota
Princeton
Harvard
Virginia Tech
Stanford
MIT
(goes to show you that where you go isn't as important as how talented and hard-working you are)
I can only hope we don't get the "Shaft". (sorry)
is a bad "muthaf**#er!
![]()
Shut your mouth