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My cousin went to RPI, it's a top engineering school graduated with degree in nuclear engineering. Smart guy, tough school. A high school friend went as well, chemical guy.
Very cold during the winter months. They both said that you need to join a frat and become socially involved because there was not a whole lot to do other than winter sports. But, this was way bay in the 70's and 80's. |
One of my good friends has a nephew who did his education at the University of WA, Navy ROTC and is now a nuke sub officer. I would also check out the ROTC Cadre while looking at the academic side. That can make a big difference in his experience in college. My son looked at Navy ROTC but the school he wanted had a small Navy program and shared PT and other resources with a neighboring University. He ended up going Army ROTC and is now a Captain coming up on year 9 active duty. With engineering and ROTC he won't have a normal college experience or really any free time at all.
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Following as my son wants to go the Navy ROTC route as well.
What Nick is saying about Mines is what I have heard also, and know a few kids that have gone there. |
Exciting times Nickshu!
RPI is the best known and highest ranked engineering school out of the bunch discussed. At least from my West Coast perspective of decades in the industry. So RPI seems to have more reach than the others. I would not get a nuclear engineering degree in undergrad. Too narrow. What if he finds out that he'd rather be a pilot after he gets to experience the different branches? What if there is a bump in the road in the long and uncertain road to commissioning? And how about life after the Navy? Good luck and keep us posted! |
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And (just ask mrs mjohnson) they do get paths to lots of interesting things - but the downside is that as ChEs they always have to do the plumbing at home. (joke, ChE is lots of fluid stuff - I are metallurgist so if I can't whack it on an anvil...) |
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But then is there any state capital that’s actually pleasant to live near? |
I grew up not far from here.
Chicago winters are worse and my oldest doesn't seem to mind. |
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I know the Navy will send him to nuclear power school anyway, so maybe a more general engineering major would be fine too. We have discussed this with him, and will discuss more. Auburn is one of his top choices, they don't have a nuke program but do have NROTC. If he ends up there he would likely just do ME. |
First off, congratulations to your son for getting into those schools. I work with a quite a few RPI engineers. Everytime I mention RPI, their overall impression was that it is a lot of $$$ to go to school in a bad area. These are relatively recent graduates (the last 10 years or so).
What exactly does he want to do with nuclear engineering? I have a friend who works at the NRC and he went to U of Roch for a Chem E degree. Some schools offer Nuke Engineering minor degrees - It might be worth pairing a mech engr degree with a nuke minor. I still think an acredited engineering degree is an acredited engineering degree. Regardless of where you go, you'll still have a few tenured professors who don't care about the students. State schools are a good bang for your buck. After that, if you really want to pick a niche area, go for your masters. |
RPI was one of the schools my son had looked at. He like the school, but Troy is the pits. He decided on RIT (Rochester Institute of Technology). Got his Masters in Imaging Science, spent 2 summers as an intern at Naval Research in DC, then, while still doing his Masters, was hired by Sandia Labratories. He went big very fast, and is still reaping the benefits. So really...it isn't the school, but the student. Congratulations to him and I hope for great things in his future !
P.S. My BIL was a Navy Sub Service officer. He went on to create a multi-billion dollar company Known as Trident Systems. The possibilities are endless... |
With exception of MIT I never saw much of a pattern of a school reflecting on a graduates quality.
I 'no hired' an intern we had from RPI - that is the only contact I've ever had with the school's output - can't tell much from one person. I think the important thing for a school is that the kid identifies with the environment and connects with the profs. Its up to the student what they get out of it. wrt MIT: absolutely everyone I ever worked with from there had been put through the wringer and was seriously prepared to buckle down and work hard. All the same story: they entered the school as the best and brightest and were beaten senseless for 4 years. I am pretty sure they all have ptsd but were all fabulous hires. |
I know nothing about RPI or your kids but would be wary of sending them to any place that appears hyper-competitive or "cut throat." I'm sure some will want to chime in about work or life being those but plenty of people are ruined unnecessarily by it and if any of us want anything for our kids it's for them to be genuinely happy (or at least content) no matter their situation or station. YMMV.
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I grew up in Niskayuna, not far away. I attended a semester there and knew a lot of RPI students over the years (GE interns, high school friends, etc.).
GREAT engineering and technical college. When I looked at it in the early 1980's, it was just behind MIT, Cal Tech and Stanford. It was one of the first universities to split Computer Science from Electrical Engineering. Great professors and the Campus can be beautiful (old buildings). But not a "well rounded" university. It has a good Greek scene if you are into Frats. And Troy is the pits. No further explanation needed. You really need to LOVE Hockey. Union was the same way...I don't get it... I was accepted VERY late to RPI. I did do a semester there, but that is a long story. Long story short, I went to Union in Schenectady... |
Update...He got into Virginia Tech, VT College of Engineering, and the Corps of Cadets there. He's over the moon about it, so looks like that's where he's going. Thanks for all the info everyone.
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VT is a great College.
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Best. |
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Congrats! My Hokie got home late last night for a week long spring break. My son won't know much about Cadets but any other questions please feel free to ask. He is CoE as well in his second semester.
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