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You know you're a washingtonian when you can pronounce Puyallup correctly....
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That's where I was born, and I am constantly having to spell it for people when they need to know my birthplace. I remember Johnny Carson used to always mention the Daffodil Festival on the Tonight Show. Also, about the only other times I have heard Puyallup mentioned was when the Huard brothers were playing in the NFL a few years ago.
Anyway, to the point of the post:
ERAU is the "Harvard of the Skies"!
Yeah, and I am still waiting for the airlines to come offer me a job with my ERAU degree.
The only thing I can say about Riddle is that if you want to get your degree with an emphasis on aviation, it's the place to go (Comp Sci with emphasis on aviation; business with emphasis on aviation; electrical engineering with emphasis on aviation; etc).
For me, the relatively boringness of Prescott and the low student population were the highlights for me. While the school probably won't hype up either of those characteristics as positives, 1) the fact that there wasn't a whole lot going on in town during the week meant I could better concentrate on my studies and 2) the low student-to-faculty ratio meant that I had a lot more one-on-one study session time with my professors than I would have at a large major university.
But I have never encountered anyone who was super-excited about my Riddle degree. In fact, it's very rare that I meet anyone who even knows what ERAU is (well, in the AF, there were a lot of guys who knew what it was, because they were getting their degrees through the distance learning school; but otherwise when I say "Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University" the response is: "Erby-Diddle Airplane School?" or "Excuse me, in ingles, por favor" or "Gasundheit!").
In short, a Riddle degree is just that - a degree. Go to ERAU because it's what you want to get out of a school, not because you think it will open doors for you, because it won't.