Inasmuch as Georgia Tech and Virginia Tech are engineering schools, sure. NJIT offers several non-technical degrees just like those two, and thus is a comprehensive university in that regard, particularly for the last 40 years or so. It is not a very small like Stevens, either.
The primary undergrad academic unit and likely still the largest school within NJIT is its engineering school, Newark College of Engineering, which I believe is what its original founding was back in the 1800s and remained what all of NJIT was known as until sometime in the 1970s. Up until then, it was basically an engineering school, but probably not since the 1980s when it started expanding its degree programs beyond traditional engineering, sciences, and architecture.
Good luck to NJ Tech (they should rebrand their athletic programs as such, develop an updated logo or spirit mark to match, etc) in America East.