The University of Michigan is in the top five of schools you could attend for both aerospace and electrical engineering. US News and World Report has a yearly college ranking. I don't know when they publish it, but the top five in any category are listed here for engineering: http://www.usnews.com/usnews/edu/college/rankings/rankengineering_brief.php Note that there are listings for those schools that also perform doctorate work and those that do not. If you aren't looking at anything past a BE, then you have more choices - or attend one for the BE, and by that time you'll have a better idea of what's available for your master's or further. I'm currently attending the University of Michigan (Computer Engineering), and I can certianly vouch for the program. Of course, they'd better be in the top five if they are going to charge *in-state* students 8k a year just for tuition. :-( -Adam Robert Ussery wrote: >Hello, PIClisters... > >As a high-school junior, I'm swimming in the sea of college solicitations propaganda. I received a 222 (99th percentile) on my PSAT test, so I assume I'm probably a candidate for the better colleges. I'm trying to weed out the colleges that, while they claim they're a good engineering college (as almost all of them do), are pretty worthless. >At the risk of starting a flame war, which schools do y'all think are the best for electrical engineering, with a possibility for aerospace engineering (I'm interested in designing aerial robots and avionics for a living :^) )? >TIA! > >- Robert > > > > >P.S., this is a repost; I don't think it posted the first time. Sorry if you get two copies... > >-- >http://www.piclist.com hint: The list server can filter out subtopics >(like ads or off topics) for you. See http://www.piclist.com/#topics > > > > > -- http://www.piclist.com hint: The list server can filter out subtopics (like ads or off topics) for you. See http://www.piclist.com/#topics