PA resident
Public High School
Engineering Major (ME) or perhaps Chemistry
Has a brother in college so would open to public schools or private schools that will give some aid because of that. Really doesn’t want a school in a very urban area (like Temple).
Like to keep it below 40K
3.51 UW/3.59W
Taking 3 AP classes next year (Chem, CS and Gov), plus 3-4 honors classes, taking Business Calc next year.
Most likely TO.
Would like to stay in PA, OH, MD, VA, NC, IN, MI, NJ or NY
Why business calculus instead of calculus suitable for engineering majors?
Any particular kinds of engineering? If chemistry is of possible interest, would chemical or materials engineering be of greater interest than other kinds?
Wondering too about the math. Are the 3 APs the only APs? Chemistry there will be more names - schools like Millersville, Salisbury, etc. could come in. So a focus on ME - but if they are not math centric, they will not make it.
I’d check into these - the first Purdue is a huge reach obviously and would a bit above $40K - but I think C MIchigan is under $30K. Grand Valley State is another for sure. And I imagine the Slippery Rock and Shippensburg as well.
But I imagine most, if not all of these, will hit budget - but check.
But I wonder about the student’s ability to succeed in MechE if math is an issue.
You didn’t say West Virginia - but look at WVU too.
School Name
City
State
Purdue University at West Lafayette
West Lafayette
Indiana
University of Southern Indiana
Evansville
Indiana
Central Michigan University
Mount Pleasant
Michigan
Grand Valley State University
Allendale
Michigan
Michigan State University
East Lansing
Michigan
Western Michigan University
Kalamazoo
Michigan
The College of New Jersey
Ewing
New Jersey
University at Buffalo, The State University of New York
Buffalo
New York
Clarkson University
Potsdam
New York
State University of New York at New Paltz
New Paltz
New York
University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Charlotte
North Carolina
The University of Akron
Akron
Ohio
Ohio University
Athens
Ohio
Pennsylvania State University, Behrend College
Erie
Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania State University, Berks Campus
Reading
Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania State University, Harrisburg, The Capital College
Your GPA and choice of Business calc vs. AP calc would likely mean Behrend (best branch for engineering) or Altoona (more residential, close to UP).
If your SAT math score is 600+, submit.
You could try applying for Material Science Engineering as suggested above, because it’s in EMS, and check summer (not Fall and summer, just Summer) to increase your odds if you want UP rather than Behrend. Although they prefer calculus and SAT math scores, fewer students apply so you may have a shot.
(You can also post on the PSU Summer/Fall 2026 PSU forum of you wish).
SUNY Buffalo is a great suggestion and would be a high target.
Just an FYI, TCNJ is excellent for chemistry. One of the best and actually graduates more chemistry students than Rutgers. They’ve also lowered their out of state tuition, so should be quite cost competitive.
If you’re open to one more neighboring state, you may want to also look at University of Delaware. Well known for chemical engineering and they graduate a lot of mechanical engineers.
Since there was a lack of clarity whether the majors under consideration are mechanical engineering and chemistry or chemical engineering, I decided to err on the side of caution and only included schools that have all three majors. I slightly expanded the states that you were considering if you had surrounding states (i.e. WV, DE, KY). But these are some schools that your son might want to check out that I think have a good to excellent chance of meeting the budget, some of which have already been mentioned:
Clarkson (NY): About 2500 undergrads
Kettering (MI): About 1300 undergrads
North Carolina A&T: About 12k undergrads at this HBCU
We have a family friend that had a great experience as a mechanical engineering major at York College. We are in CA and it was cheaper than in-state tuition at a UC school. He graduated in 2020, so I’m not sure if that is still the case.