Only a couple of days left to decide and I'm somewhat overwhelmed with information! I have the NSF so funding is somewhat less of an issue. I am interested in the area of optics/photonics and I am unsure whether I would like to pursue industry or academia after graduating, but would like to attend the institution that can have the most options available.
I was accepted to the PhD in EE program at Columbia University with a fellowship. Although I found one group that's a great match, my hold ups are to whether Columbia has a strong reputation for engineering and the smaller size of the program. My area of interest often overlaps with Applied Physics, so the strong Applied Physics department is definitely a plus. I really liked the feel of the department as well, and am familiar with the NYC area. I have been told that if I'd like to work abroad, the brand name school could be valuable.
GTech is definitely a powerhouse engineering school and I was also offered a fellowship there. I had a very disorganized visit experience which didn't leave me with the best impression of the department (not very cohesive at least), but that's no comment as to the quality of the research. I have potentially found a good advisor match this past week but there is a large department to fall back on if that doesn't pan out although I have no found many good matches so far. I am less fond of Atlanta but it is certainly cheaper.
Stanford MS only really became a consideration lately due to the NSF, and did not change the original decision. I would have to reapply one year in. I was told that this was quite doable by a professor, but am still hesitant (is this really relatively trivial/worth the risk?). I have many options professor wise in my area of interest (EE/MSE/Applied Physics) though if I should decide to go. I am a little worried that if I don't manage to switch over, I will not be in a great position to transfer to another school due to the use of 2/3 years of NSF funding and non-research focus of the masters program.
Any advice or thoughts, especially on the reputation of the programs, would be much appreciated!!! Thank you so much for your time!