Johns Hopkins University
StudentsReview ::
Johns Hopkins University - Extra Detail about the Comment | |||||||||||||||||||
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Educational Quality | A | Faculty Accessibility | C |
Useful Schoolwork | A | Excess Competition | B+ |
Academic Success | B+ | Creativity/ Innovation | B- |
Individual Value | C+ | University Resource Use | C |
Campus Aesthetics/ Beauty | B | Friendliness | B |
Campus Maintenance | B | Social Life | D+ |
Surrounding City | B- | Extra Curriculars | B+ |
Safety | C | ||
Describes the student body as: Arrogant, SnootyDescribes the faculty as: Helpful |
Lowest Rating Social Life | D+ |
Highest Rating Educational Quality | A |
See, I am in the process of choosing between Tufts and JHU and I'm trying to figure out what kinds of assignments are normally given to IS majors… a lot of essays? research? Do IS majors choose the level of exposure they get to language, history, IR? |
Major: Political Science (This Major's Salary over time)
A lot of people think Hopkins is cut throat, but I haven't found this to be true in my program (International Relations) but I have seen a little bit of it with the pre-meds. Yes, you can go to Hopkins and not be a doctor. For a small university there is not as much contact with the faculty as I'd expected. However the resources are there for pretty much anything you want to explore. Sometimes I wonder where my 36,000 dollars of tuition money are going, but only when I'm feeling very pessimistic. Hopkins isn't a place where someone is going to hold your hand and help you through stuff, you have to have your own initiative and be able to hold your own in an academically difficult environment. Despite that, there is a club for pretty much every interest, and as long as you're not snobbish, Baltimore can be a fun place to be. Despite what some may say, the school is not actually in the ghetto, though it is not in the richest part of town that some who attend may be accustomed to.