The University of Southern California
| StudentsReview ::
The University of Southern California - Extra Detail about the Comment | |||||||||||||||||||
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| Educational Quality | B- | Faculty Accessibility | B- |
| Useful Schoolwork | B- | Excess Competition | B- |
| Academic Success | B- | Creativity/ Innovation | B- |
| Individual Value | B | University Resource Use | B- |
| Campus Aesthetics/ Beauty | B+ | Friendliness | B |
| Campus Maintenance | A | Social Life | A |
| Surrounding City | A+ | Extra Curriculars | A- |
| Safety | A+ | ||
| Describes the student body as: Describes the faculty as: Self Absorbed | |||
| Lowest Rating Educational Quality | B- |
| Highest Rating Surrounding City | A+ |
Major: Economics (This Major's Salary over time)
I really like the fact that USC is quite teched up. There are many computer labs on campus that open 24/7; you can do a lot of the administrative hassle-dazzle online (e.g., register for classes, grade/degree reports, review bills); there are free DSL-speed internet connections at many dorms and in the libraries, where you can hook up your laptop with a network card. When I graduated last summer USC just began a wireless internet service (free again I think) that you can access on campus.What makes it bad at SC? Overpriced food on campus? I forget the details, but I remember it was ridiculous (My roommate was convinced USC had some twisted plan to squeeze every cent out of dorm-living freshmen. Too little room to explain here.). In all fairness, USC is probably not the only school that overcharges its own students, one way or another.