<p>So glad you thought that info might help. Again, the info is dated. I’m just trying to suggest where you might look.</p>
<p>I can’t directly answer your next question, but for what it’s worth, very few CE majors go to graduate school. The opportunities with a bachelor’s are very enticing.</p>
<p>I don’t remember any engineering grad students at UD who had been undergrads there. If memory serves me, most had foreign degrees and moved to the US for advanced degrees. Again, things may be different now.</p>
<p>Usually students want to “move up” to a better college for an advanced degree. Also, just because a program is top quality at the bachelor’s level doesn’t mean it’s considered top quality at the grad level. I.e., he may not want to go to UD for grad school. Maybe at that point he would switch to e.g., MIT.</p>
<p>More commonly, CEs add a different degree, in e.g., law instead. Once I started working, almost all CEs I worked with were getting MBAs part time. I only ever, in all my years of working surrounded by CEs, met one Ph.D. in CE outside of academics.</p>
<p>My point is, if he does well in CE, his future is wide open with possibilities.</p>