I'm
almost done with my undergraduate degree in Health Sciences. This
is my final semester and I've been here for all
4 years. I've had good and bad experiences with this
school, so I'll try to break it down as much
as possible. My major “Health Sciences” is a relatively new
program. In the few years they've had it, they've changed
the dean several times, made it hard to take upper
division classes simultaneously, and a few of the professors have
left already. I can literally count how many there are
on my fingers, I believe they have 3-4 professors for
this major now. Other than that, I really have learned
a lot from my upper division classes, however I wish
they focused it more on a subject. Health Sciences is
REALLY broad, but you have to do more schooling if
you want a legitimate and successful career. In the last
semester, you are told to find an internship site. You're
told to find this all by yourself. There's way too
much back and forth between the internship site, you, and
career services. I understand the objective, however having to site
yourself is difficult if no other student has gone there
before.
As for my general education requirements, I actually really
liked them. I learned a LOT from the variety I've
taken. I've made sure to pick the right professors (opinions
from former students). Class sizes are small, your biggest class
probably being 25. Professors know me by name and not
“hey you”. One thing that irks me is that some
of the professors take attendance. I feel like I'm in
high school when they do that. Other than that, pick
the right professors and you'll be okay. I usually wait
until the first class to really see if I need
the books, because sometimes the professors will “suggest” them rather
than require them. It truly depends on the professor.
In
terms of the campus, they have 3. Downtown campus, windward
campus, and oceanic institute. Downtown campus is rather ugly. There
is not set campus area JUST for students. It's all
just classrooms in buildings within the financial district. Therefore, you
have the homeless and other random characters walking Fort Street
Mall right next to you. For the most part, I've
never had an issue with random characters because I've paid
them no attention. Therefore, I suggest you do the same.
The location of the campus is convenient for me. The
commute from Waikiki on the bus really sucks. It's a
popular route so expect a 15-minute to hour commute, depending
on time, location, traffic, etc. Just variables you'll expect if
you're driving a car. I currently live near Ala Moana,
so the commute on the bus can last from 10
minutes to 30 minutes. Convenient location, but you pay the
price on housing. MOPEDS. They're a fad at HPU... probably
Hawaii for that matter. It's quicker for people in Waikiki
and other areas close to town, but note the dangers
and risks involved in operating it. If you want to
have a moped, this portion of my comments is huge
for you. Be careful of where you park. Chaplain Lane
and those racks on Fort Street Mall and Beretania get
full quickly with morning classes. They've started to implement harsh
parking tickets if you're parked incorrectly. I strongly suggest trying
to find free parking garages to park in. It's less
of a hassle because coming back to a parking ticket
on your seat isn't fun. The great thing about the
downtown campus is the shuttle. They've got bus shuttles to
bring you from downtown to windward. Since all my classes
are on windward, I'd rather drive to downtown, hop on
the shuttle, and save myself some gas and money because
you have to pay for parking. The shuttles run every
15 minutes (commute is 20-30 minutes depending on time and
traffic), have an ample amount of seating, and some of
the drivers are really nice. Not too bad for how
much tuition is. Classrooms downtown vary in size, I've had
some which were huge and others that were really small.
Truly depends on the subject you're taking. If it's not
that “needed” amongst the student population, probability is you'll get
a small classroom. They have computer labs as well, and
even when its busy I've been able to get a
computer. The library... needs help. It's really old and outdated.
The computers are up to par and rather new, but
everything else is just old.
Windward campus has a gorgeous
location. It's nestled in right after the Koolau mountains after
the Pali Highway. Unfortunately, the campus itself sucks. The buildings
are old and classrooms and desks are outdated. If you're
taking the bus to Windward campus, PLEASE be careful. In
order to reach the bus stops, you have to cross
Kamehameha Highway. It's marked for pedestrians, but sometimes the drivers
cannot see you. There are no stop lights for it.
Recently, there was a fatality of a student crossing from
the bus stop to campus. There were also pedestrian accidents
from traffic as well. They need to implement a pedestrian
bridge for crossing safely.
In my first year, I lived
up at the dorms on the Windward side. It sucked.
For the most part I made valuable friendships, but in
terms of living conditions, the dorms felt like a cell
block. Brick walls and no AC. I did have an
ample amount of closet space though, for someone who was
living with 2 other people in one small little room.
The dining commons were open during weird hours (at least
for me). I'm accustomed to later meals, so having dinner
at 5pm or 6pm was way too early. The food
variation was terrible as well. They “changed up” the menu
every other week, but after a while it just gets
repetitious. They offer this “late night” meal, which is all
fried and greasy foods. Good if you like that stuff,
bad if you don't.
I have never been to the
oceanic institute. I do know that they're located on the
Waimanalo side. I also know they have shuttles running from
the Windward campus to the oceanic institute as well in
accordance with the classes. Not sure how often or how
convenient it really is.
Financial aid is located downtown. Throughout
my 4 years at HPU, I haven't run across any
mishaps with my financial aid and loans. To be honest,
I haven't even been to the financial aid office. I
wasn't babied through the process. If you want to get
your financial aid in the very beginning of the semester,
think ahead and get it done a month before the
school year starts. Don't lag. Don't wait until the semester's
begun to actually file it. Make things simple for yourself
and get everything done early. The earlier its done the
faster you'll receive your money.
Academic advisors are helpful. They
aren't helpful to people if they don't know what to
ask them. I've gone there strictly to make sure my
classes are set and I'm on the right track to
my graduation date so I've had positive experiences. Come in
there with a list of things you need to address
and everything will work out smoothly. I highly suggest at
the beginning of the school year to make a full
undergraduate schedule with them. Not just one or two semesters
in advanced, but your entire education at HPU. There are
some classes that are only offered during certain semesters, so
planning ahead makes it easier. Don't lag if you want
to get your degree done. Getting classes in my opinion
isn't difficult. Even when they are full, you can always
ask the professor via email if it's okay for you
to enroll because you need the class and petition it
from there.
Overall, I love it in Hawaii and HPU.
Every college has its pros and cons. For HPU, mine
was such a big jumble of positive and negative experiences
that I don't even know how to rate it. Would
I apply to HPU again with this kind of experience?
Yes. Hawaii in itself is amazing so getting away from
California and coming here was one of the best experiences
of my life. I think the last thing I have
to say is that I wish my tuition money would
be put to use in improving the outdated equipment and
classrooms. For a private education, HPU isn't all that expensive
in my book. I think it's almost $20,000 now, but
I mean, it's a PRIVATE school. Other private schools on
the mainland cost $30,000+.