The Franciscan University of Steubenville
| StudentsReview ::
The Franciscan University of Steubenville - Extra Detail about the Comment | |||||||||||||||||||
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| Educational Quality | A- | Faculty Accessibility | A |
| Useful Schoolwork | B+ | Excess Competition | A |
| Academic Success | A | Creativity/ Innovation | B- |
| Individual Value | A | University Resource Use | B- |
| Campus Aesthetics/ Beauty | A- | Friendliness | A- |
| Campus Maintenance | A- | Social Life | A- |
| Surrounding City | B- | Extra Curriculars | C+ |
| Safety | B | ||
| Describes the student body as: Describes the faculty as: | |||
| Lowest Rating Extra Curriculars | C+ |
| Highest Rating Faculty Accessibility | A |
Major: Religion/Religious (This Major's Salary over time)
I am writing this review with several years of reflection, since I graduated in 2003 and stopped working on my Masters a few years later (because I switched careers to Counseling, not because of a deficiency in the MA program). The positive: I genuinely enjoyed my years there and remember them as some of the happiest in my life. I transferred from a huge Big Ten University, and the environment at Franciscan was exactly what I needed. Yes, I didn't get to party maybe as hard as would have at another university. On the other hand, I made very genuine friends who I could trust, talk with in depth, and who still, believe it or not, had a sense of fun and humor. We did have a few wild nights in Pittsburgh and WV, so it wasn't all prayers and mass. There are days where I regret not having the wild time in college that some other people had, but there are others where I don't regret it one bit and am glad I had (I know this is cheesy) a "wholesome" atmosphere and grew as a person. And I liked all the mass and praying. I'm not as devout now as I was then; I've grown into a comfortably more liberal and happy Catholicism, but going through a super religious period in my life was good for me. It gave me a foundation that will always be there and that I go back to often, intellectually and spiritually.Also, people complain about the town, but from a social standpoint, it was good for me to spend some time in a rusty steel town. I grew up in a wealthy liberal protestant (I'm a convert) family in yuppie college town Ann Arbor, so this experience with conservative Catholics and a rust belt town gave me some real experience with regional, economic, and cultural diversity, and made me a richer person with a broader understanding of the world. So instead of complaining about the town, students should open their eyes and be receptive to the unexpected experiences.