<p>Hello I am starting community college this summer but I am planning on transferring within 2 years. I am currently looking at transferring colleges and was wondering what are some good but small engineering schools that are not too competitive, but at the same time are not too easy to get into and also accept transfer students.</p>
<p>The one school i loved was Olin…till I realized there really competitive to get into and do not have my major, computer science. </p>
<p>The area I would like to attend would be in the Southern States, such as Florida, Georgia, Texas, Indiana not necessarily has to be in the South. I would be ok with Northern or Western or East Coast schools but I those schools tend to be in the 40,000+ Range of tuiton. </p>
<p>I am attending community college because I did not do well in high school, I slacked off and did not reach my true potential but I am willing to give it all that I got. </p>
<p>Although there is no chance I will get into a Ivy if you think otherwise let me know. </p>
<p>Often, the same state public universities are most friendly to transfer students from community colleges, and are more likely to have course articulation agreements. You also need to consider what your price limit would be and check net price calculators.</p>
<p>Yes well I have considered one public school in Texas. Texas A&M and looked at there articulation and it said that they dont accept Calc 1 2 or 3 which are three classes i would be required to take</p>
<p><a href=“Texas A&M University - Transfer Course Equivalency System”>Howdy Security Block; indicates that there are many Texas colleges whose courses are accepted for transfer credit for “Engineering Math I, II, III” (apparently, Texas A&M has specific versions of calculus for engineering majors).</p>
<p>You may also want to check other Texas public universities.</p>
<p>There are many public flagships which are extremely leniant with regards to awarding transfer credit and have well funded engineering programs. Off the top of my head, the University of Oklahoma, Oklahoma State (a popular alternative for Texans who didn’t get into TAMU), University of Alabama, and Oregon State all are quite generous with which classes they’ll award credit for. </p>
<p>However, I suggest you wait a year to find out how you’ll do in CC before asking these questions. See how you’ll do, if you still want to major in an engineering field (most students will switch majors before graduation, and what you’d like out of a college. </p>