Schools College/university with a very good all-around science program

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The discussion centers on finding small universities in small cities with strong all-around science programs. Recommendations include the University of Missouri Rolla, Southeast Missouri State University, the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, and Otterbein College in Westerville, OH. Cal Poly, specifically the San Luis Obispo campus, is highlighted for its hands-on approach to education, particularly in animal science and engineering, although it may not fit the strict definition of "small" due to its 18,000 student population. The town of San Luis Obispo, with a population of 40,000, is considered small for California. The emphasis is on immediate engagement in major-specific courses and practical experience, which are seen as significant advantages of attending these institutions.
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I'm looking for a college/university with a very good all-around science program. The school must be small and in a small city. Any U.S. state is fine. Thank you.
 
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heres a few, I am looking for similar schools myself...

Check out U missouri Rolla, and southeast missouri state university, also U illinois Urbana Champaign, I hope those help
 
Otterbein College; Westerville, OH.

Small, private school, great programs in physics (my specialty), chemistry, and life sciences.
 
Haftred said:
I'm looking for a college/university with a very good all-around science program. The school must be small and in a small city. Any U.S. state is fine. Thank you.


What do you consider small, and what do you consider small city?

I would recomment CalPoly, but that might not meet your conditions of 'small.' Its definitely not the largest of schools, not like UCLA or other campus's with 40,000+ students, but it is still 18,000 students (total, undergrad-graduate.) 3,500 people per year or so. The town is 40,000 people, which in California at least is a small town.

The big advantage to the campus is not size, but philosophy. Everything here is meant to be hands on. Animal science majors start learning by handling animals right away, freshman year. Lots of lab courses. Lots of hands on work. Also you declare your major immediately and start taking classes in your major immediately, its not like most campus's where you don't even have a major your first two years.
 
I wished I could have gone to Cal Poly because of its reputation, but it's way out in the middle of nowhere. One cool thing about the place though, they have a gaming convention every summer called PolyCon that's awesome.
 
ah... calpoly. i applied to the one in san louis obisbo. when i visited it, i enjoyed it, because its a nice, small/medium sized school in a beach town. the two calpoly schools (san louis obisbo, and pomona) have been known for their engineering and science programs, so you might want to check those out.
 
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