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PlotFuture / Schools / Oregon Institute of Technology

Oregon Institute of Technology

Public · Oregon
acceptance 92%SAT middle 50% 1045–1300ACT middle 50% 22–26type Public
Oregon Institute of Technology is a less selective public school in Oregon — it admits about 92% of applicants. admitted students typically score around 1172 on the SAT (1045–1300, middle 50%). These are facts about who enrolls — admission depends on many factors beyond test scores.

The middle-50% SAT band

Half of admitted students scored inside this range. A quarter scored below the left edge; a quarter scored above the right.

How selective it is vs nearby schools

Acceptance rate compared with other Oregon schools at a similar selectivity — this school is in amber.

Majors offered here — and what they pay

A sample of programs at this school, sorted by reported early-career earnings. Click any to see its full outcomes, or see the school + major combined.
Mechanical Engineering
grads earn $103k/yr
major →
Computer Engineering Technologies/Technici
grads earn $101k/yr
major →
Electrical, Electronics, And Communication
grads earn $101k/yr
major →
Engineering, Other
grads earn $91k/yr
major →
Computer And Information Sciences, General
grads earn $91k/yr
major →
Allied Health Diagnostic, Intervention, An
grads earn $87k/yr
major →
Health And Medical Administrative Services
grads earn $85k/yr
major →
Civil Engineering
grads earn $85k/yr
major →
Clinical/Medical Laboratory Science/Resear
grads earn $83k/yr
major →
Biology, General
grads earn $67k/yr
major →
Business Administration, Management And Op
grads earn $60k/yr
major →
Clinical, Counseling And Applied Psycholog
grads earn $50k/yr
major →
Where this comes from. Acceptance rate and the middle-50% SAT/ACT bands are from the U.S. Department of Education's IPEDS admissions survey (the same data colleges report to the government). Test scores are only one input — admission also weighs essays, grades, recommendations, activities and institutional priorities, which no single number can capture. These figures describe the group of students who enrolled, not any one applicant's chances.