). Yes, free would have been nice, then again if I went to school for free I wouldn’t have the joy of paying back loans now. If you ever feel that your missing out on paying loans let me know, I’d be happy to share mine.
It is almost impossible to compare small schools and big schools. I am almost certain (though I have no data to back it up) that on a whole a school like RPI has a higher percentage of undergrads doing research and has more resources per student to provide. This is simply because RPI doesn’t accept the same number of students as a big school like Penn State. By SAT score (a terrible way to characterize students, but the best I can easily find) the top 75% of students at RPI score about the same as the top 25% at Penn State. These two groups are probably academically comparable and I think that if you were to compare the educational and professional opportunities presented to these two groups you would see a lot of simmilarities. The whole of Penn State with 40,000 students is obviously not comparable to RPI, comparing Penn State’s Science and Engineering departments to RPI would be a much more apt comparison.
As far as interdisiplinary opportunities not being available at smaller private schools, just as unfair as it is to group all Big Schools into the party and skate by mentality it is also unfair to group all small school engineering programs into one category, the people at CMU, Stanford, Dartmouth and any number of other schools with top tier humanities and engineering programs would have something to say about it. I agree that big schools offer more opportunity outside of Engineering, however if you aren’t pretty much convinced you want to be an engineer you don’t go to a school like RPI. Even my humanities at RPI were focused on things like Engineering Ethics, Sustainable Development and Cognitive Science. It is a specialty school, and as the campus has seen with recent attempts to diversify, the Alumni don’t want to see it as anything other than a Science and Engineering school.
Those studies are always very subjective there isn’t any good way to track job placement and success of students.
Another pretty neat place is our combustion lab, where there have been a couple of undergrad rocket engine firings, and a whole ton of ignition research.