Columbia University in the City of New York
StudentsReview ::
Columbia University in the City of New York - Extra Detail about the Comment | |||||||||||||||||||
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Educational Quality | B+ | Faculty Accessibility | A- |
Useful Schoolwork | B+ | Excess Competition | B- |
Academic Success | A | Creativity/ Innovation | A- |
Individual Value | A- | University Resource Use | A- |
Campus Aesthetics/ Beauty | B+ | Friendliness | B |
Campus Maintenance | A- | Social Life | A+ |
Surrounding City | B+ | Extra Curriculars | A |
Safety | A | ||
Describes the student body as: FriendlyDescribes the faculty as: Friendly, Helpful |
Lowest Rating Excess Competition | B- |
Highest Rating Social Life | A+ |
Major: Other (This Major's Salary over time)
Just like any other school, it's what you make of it. The course-work was intense, but I learned a great deal, and now looking back at my experience, I am happy to have finished. It's a great university if you want to get involved in research, and professors are readily available for dicussion. And no, don't go to Columbia if you want your hand to be held—as this is a top-not school, you won't be required to simply memorize formulas. In terms of course-work, it's not about quantity, but about guality! Tests are especially challenging because they require you to demonstrate what you have learned and not what you have memorized (if you know what that means, you'll probably do well at Columbia). The city is great, but it is NYC, so it's dirty, smelly, and rude…but don't judge a school by its surroundings…Columbia is for education, and if you want a good one, try to get in. Good luck.By the way, I majored in biomedical engineering (had to choose "other"). Also, keep in mind that these are my opinions, and are directly related to the courses that I took, and so it's only obvious that other people, who come from other backgrounds and/or enrolled in a different program, might have had a drastically different opinion of Columbia.