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by djimbe_Archive
I am a graduate of IIT. Class of '89. My degree is BS in Mechanical Engineering. I started my college career at Michigan Tech University, but transferred to IIT after my 2nd year of school for a variety of reasons. It was one of the best decisions I've ever made...life changing. Or creating, actually because everything I have and do now is a direct result of my going to IIT. Something would have happened had I gotten my education elsewhere, but the life I lead now is what I wanted and I got it.
When I attended it was a quality institution if you measure that by things like direct access to your professors, small classes, diverse and intelligent student body, facilities, etc. The Scarlet Hawks ain't gonna set the NCAA on it's ear in anything; fortunately the student body don't care. Much of the population commutes, as I did. I've spent no time in the new buildings on campus, so can't comment on them. I don't know what you seek to study. I can say this about the school: people that hire for engineering postions? THEY know about IIT. Most of the public equates it with late night ads for a place called ITT Technical Institute. I can't count the number of casual acquiantences that have given me shit for that, but nobody in the professional engineering world has. It's a full on Engineering University that I would put up against the best the midwest has to offer, and I mean Purdue, Rose Hulman, U of I Urbana, Univ. of Cincinnati, and any others you might choose.
Know this about undergraduate engineering education: it is designed to make you a graduate student, NOT a working engineer. That was, and continues to be, my biggest beef. In fairness, it's very hard to teach practical pipe design or industrial hydraulics or project management to a class full of people. And even at IIT, the pure manufacturing experience of some of the staff is lacking. But manufacturing just happens to be my focus in life. Maybe it ain't yours, and the more theoretical appeals to you. I guess I'm trying to say that "real world" engineering education happens in the real world, not in school. School gets you ready and gets you into the real world. Take it for that and run.
In some ways (because of my desire to work in a factory not an office) I hated school and how it missed my particular boat. I had to grit my teeth to get through it, I lived like shit, worked a restaurant job as well as shifts in the steel mill to help pay for it...in many ways it was the worst part of my life. What that effort, and the fact that I expended it at a place like IIT got me though? Can't measure that.
Good luck with your decision...