StudentsReview ™ :: Mark a survey Invalid or inform SR staff

-or-
Search for Colleges by Region
 

or within distance of city





  Who's got the Best (variable)?

Perceptual Rankings:
You Make 'Em.
We Post 'Em.
You Vote 'Em Up.
You Vote 'Em Down.
Aww yeah.


Mark a survey and Inform Staff

Please do not overuse -- this is just intended to notify SR staff of probably invalid surveys. We will not "edit" or censor existing valid surveys.

This Survey/Comment is:
Valid
Invalid
Wrong location/Incorrect School
None of the above
Mark all that apply:
Content Nonsensical
Content Useless
Duplicate Survey
High Vulgarity
High Grammatical Error
Malicious Intent/Faked
Probably Admissions
SPAM
Added notes (max 100 chars):

Please remember that all surveys, even vulgar ones or those with poor grammar, convey something about the student body and the institution.

 
Existing Review Notes:
Administration:

Peer Review:
5.45.80.218:valid:Content Nonsensical, Duplicate Survey, High Vulgarity, High Grammatical Error, Probably Admissions, Content Useless, Malicious Intent/Faked, SPAM, :1
5.45.80.218:valid:Content Nonsensical, Duplicate Survey, High Vulgarity, High Grammati

Statistical Analyzer:

 
Survey (Identifying information hidden.)
ADKEY: 5076
Anywhere: 1
Charac: 2
ContactOk: 1
Csalary: 150000
Gender:
GoingWell: 1
HigherED: 1
Intelligence: 4
Motivation: 1
Position1: law student
Position2: federal (jr.) staff attorney
Position3: labor sector union attorney
Position4: federal (sr.) staff attorney
Position5:
Position6:
Preparedness: 3
Professional:
Relevance:
Reputation: 9
ReviewLevel:
Satisfied: 1
Ssalary: 50000
StartingJob: federal (jr.) staff attorney
StillInField:
UContrib1:
UContrib2: 1
UContrib3:
UContrib4:
WhereURNow1:
WhereURNow2:
WhereURNow3:
WhereURNow4: 1
WhereURNow5:
WhereURNow6:
WhereURNow7:
WhereURNow8:
Year: 82
Valid Email Address

Princeton, like many descriptions of the Hindu goddess of creation/destruction-Kali, is many things to many different people. It is a truly challenging experience in that one tends to be surrounded by fairly bright, individuals who have a great deal of ambition. Socially, in the late adolescent, early adult years that tend to be indicative of the character-to-be of the student(s), Princeton offers the odd, somewhat outmoded construct of the Ivy League private eating clubs. These represent a sub rosa manner of allowing students to believe that they are making their first real choices of whom they will snub or with whom they will bond. Although not officially ordained by the school; the strange ritual of bickering and developing new neuroses to take with you for the next 20 years of your existence, is essentially maintained and supported de facto, if not de jure, by the University community. This only makes sense though, when one considers that (when I was in school) there is/was little else that a student of limited means could seek out for entertainment in central New Jersey. At least little that was safe and legal. The academics are excellent. Athletics are fine for 'club sport' enthusiasts and upholders of old school east coast basketball styles, involving quaint notions such as selflessness and placing the good of the many above the interests of the few or the one. Bill Bradley meets Mr. spock, if you will.

Overall, as I suspect American educational experiences are geared at the end of the 20th and beginning of the 21st centuries, Princeton is a valuable commodity and terrific opportunity—probably a 'best buy' on a number of levels. Just remember: caveat emptor.

StudentsReview Advice!

• What is a good school?
• Statistical Significance
• How to choose a Major
• How to choose your Career
• What you make of it?
• How Ivy League Admissions works
• On the Student/Faculty Ratio

• FAFSA: Who is a Parent?
• FAFSA: Parent Contribution
• FAFSA: Dream out of reach

• College Financial Planning
• Survive College and Graduate
• Sniffing Out Commuter Schools
• Preparing for College: A HS Roadmap
• Talking to Your Parents about College.
• Is a top college worth it?
• Why is college hard?
• Why Kids Aren't Happy in Traditional Schools