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5.45.80.218:valid:Content Nonsensical, Duplicate Survey, High Vulgarity, High Grammatical Error, Probably Admissions, Content Useless, Malicious Intent/Faked, SPAM, :1
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I want to emphasize to any high school students who are reading this that college is where you learn to take responsibility for yourself and grow into an independent adult. If you come into the University of Tennessee expecting it to take care of you and parent you through your college years, you are sorely mistaken. If you expect the university to make what you need available to you and give you a chance to succeed or fail on your own, this is a good place to go.

I was a geography major for my undergraduate years, but came in undecided and contemplating a hard science major. I admit that I was not prepared for college fully—I did not have a clear path, such as engineering, science, social science, or humanities, picked out. It's helpful for you if you can narrow it down to one of those before you get here. You can get a degree in each area here, but the prerequisites for the major and distribution requirements for the different degrees (BA, BS, Engineering, etc.) are very different, and you can find yourself repeating your freshman year if you change your major too drastically after you have already started on one path. Also, funding issues can cause some ugly problems. Lack of funding has led to increased load on Teaching Assistants and Teaching Associates, and methods that will eventually remedy the problems of large lecture classes (technologically enhanced "smart" classrooms and online course programs such as Blackboard) are not perfected. Those who come in without any AP credits can find themselves having to build up credit hours in order to be first in line to sign up for a required course which may be offered only once in every 4 semesters (such as Quantitative Methods in Geography). Be sure you're well-informed before you get here and that you keep up on these issues once you're here, or you may find yourself spending 6 years trying to graduate. There's a reason fewer than half of our graduates finish in 4 years. . .

Aside from funding problems, the university is capable of giving you the education you need to succeed in graduate school. You really get out of the university what you put into it, and the professors certainly make it clear what sort of material you should learn in your classes. Some are better teachers than others, but all have something to teach you and you can learn from each of them. Classes aren't horribly hard, but they put the info out there that can make it possible for you to learn a great deal. The library is a terrific resource and should either have or be able to acquire any book or periodical you need for a project. Dorms aren't beautiful, but are sufficient for a student's purposes. Extra-curriculars, including the terrific athletic department, are fun and cater to a good number of different crowds (we even have a NRML chapter working for the legalization of marijuana). Students tend to be on the conservative side, but enough liberals come here that you'll still get heard. Professors tend to be liberal, but do not grade based on political skew—you're graded based on your abilities, not your opinions. Cliques abound, but the social scene is not closed, and just about anybody can find someone to be anything from an acquaintance to a lifelong friend. Knoxville itself is not the prettiest or cleanest city on Earth, but has the basic resources one needs as a college student (including cheap apartments) and Nashville and Atlanta are short drives away. I think that pretty much sums up UT—not an amazing super-school, but does not put limits on you.

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