@ShokaiShimizu - Having lived in New York my whole life and having worked in the studio world hear for the past 4 years, and just finished the college hunt myself(one of the schools I looked at was your one, which I guess shall remain nameless heheheh), I'll tell you what I've learned. First, internships are key. Seriously, not only will you learn everything you need doing them, but you'll also establish connections in the industry, while working in a position that has the potential(if you play your cards right) to turn into a real job. Schools with such limited focus such as SAE aren't exactly the best bet for an industry like the studio one right now in New York(although the current size of it isn't exactly as magnificient as it used to be, it's still a big industry). Your knowledge will for the most part be on a textbook level, and your connections will be made up of primarily your fellow classmates. Relying on people in the same position as you isn't the best bet for laying future professional relationships. Personally, I'd say either stick it out at your current school and try to soak up as much information about recording EVERY genre that you can, as making money engineering and producing metal isn't exactly an easy thing to do.
I began an internship 4 years ago at a studio that used to be one of the bigger ones here in New York. After a year, the head engineer quit, and I was promoted to engineer. This was all made possible by my doing everything I could find in the studio, whether it was sweeping or grabbing lunch, or setting up the newest piece of gear and assisting sessions. Two years after this, the studio closed its doors, but instead of letting me go look for other jobs with the other engineers, my boss took me in as his personal engineer(he's a producer/composer). I spent the next year working for him, until about a week ago when I was offered a job as an Audio Editor for a large advertising agency. This fall, I'm attending the NYU Clive Davis Department of Recorded Music to focus on producing, promotion, managing, label stuff, etc. Basically, I'm trying to branch out. Hope this was a little bit helpful in some way, I dunno, I'm exhausted.