computer engineering

<p>I’m looking for schools that allow admission after the 11th grade (either as a special high school student-dual enrollment type of thing or as a regular freshman). I’m really interested in computer engineering and plan on pursuing a graduate degree. If I had a choice, I’d probably lean toward a smaller school but wouldn’t rule anything out based on size alone. I am considering both private and public.</p>

<p>I don’t know any school that match. Community college is usually the case, because it is affordable, and many of them work with the local education department and schools to offer high school students to get credits. Also depending on the states, state universities might also allow that to happen.
To be clear dual enrollment usually refers to taking college-level courses. Giving a regular freshman enrollment probably can’t happen. Because a regular college freshman should have already graduate from high school. </p>

<p>A smaller school can be very beneficial, especially when you really want to interact with your peers and faculty.
If you find yourself more comfortable with smaller schools, a good example would be Purdue University. Its engineering programs are relatively small. But I think the smallest program @ Purdue would be the physics program. Only like 8-20 people graduate every year. LOL</p>

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<p>I really hope that was a joke. As of Fall 2009, it had roughly 40,000 students enrolled.</p>

<p>SORRY boneh3ad.</p>

<p>I meant Duke if you look at when i said physics. i always got myself confused. </p>

<p>it’s relatively small for a good school 1300 undergraduate.
Duke has small numbers of physics major; it can be an advantage for computer engineers if you are lending toward hardware and electronic industry.</p>

<p>I had Purdue and duke mixed up. Sorry poster.</p>

<p>Well Duke is not small enough if you compare that to cooper union, Rice…</p>

<p>Haha, I was going to say, what on Earth do you consider a big school? Still, Duke actually has ~6,400 undergrads, which, while not huge, is still not really what I would consider a small school. The part I can’t believe is that there are more grad students there than undergrads.</p>