The Academy of Art University
StudentsReview ::
The Academy of Art University - Comments and Student Experiences | |||||||||||||||||||
|
The best thing by far about this school is the education. A lot of the instructors are douches, but they do their job- they prepare you for the real world. They don't always know how to teach well or deal with immature students, but they are working professionals (for the most part) and give you the best insight on what it's really like out there. I personally would rather have a hard ass teacher who was a prick, but taught me how to survive in the industry rather than an instructor who was nice, sugar coated everything, encouraged me, but did not show me what the industry is really like.
When going to this school, you have to do two things mentally- the first is accept that you're going to art school and that it isn't always taken seriously. What you are choosing to do with your life is difficult, and you have to be ready to take on the challenges that you WILL have once you graduate. No one is going to hold your hand. Despite this, the other mentality you will have to hold onto is the creative side that can take you where you want to go. Often when you get discouraged (which happens a lot, if not every day at this school), you tend to lose some of your creative energy and not focus well or try as hard. This causes you to not do so well or just slack off and get angry with the school for "not teaching you right" or some other lame excuse.
You have to understand that you're the only one you can really blame for how you do after you leave the school.
A lot of people come here and get distracted by the city and the social life. I see it happen every day. If you can have fun, but take your work seriously and learn how to put that before anything else, you should do great! Working hard is the number one key though. You can only be so good, but if you aren't putting in the hard work, you're not going to make it. Even the best ones sweat.
There are some programs at this school that might not suit you like you think. It's best to look through the degree breakdown online and then look through the course book and see each class description. Ask yourself "Am I going to be passionate about all or most of these classes?" If not, maybe you should change your major or find another school. Also ask, "Is what I learn here right now going to correlate to the future, or will things most likely change (making this degree worthless)?" That's a big one to ask, and the answer isn't no like a lot of people that go here think. It's what you do with what they teach you that counts.
It all comes down to "Am I willing to work hard all the time, spend a lot of money, and handle the mental stresses of juggling hours of homework, partying, possibly work, and anything else going on all at the same time?" If you don't think you can, then don't try. If anything, start in the summer semester and take two classes to see if you can handle it. If you can't, it isn't the right school, and at least you haven't wasted as much time and/or money as you would have if you'd have started in the fall or spring.Best of luck!
I sent in all my tax information before flying out there and once I got there all the housing was taken so I got stuck in a hotel. Basically, they told me I would be stuck in the hotel for a weekend - a few days later I got a letter saying I would be stuck in the hotel for a few months.
What I think they do is just take every application and let all these students arrive. There were over 30 other students stuck at this hotel. Once a student with housing drops then they can start moving in the extras.
It gets worse. After talking to financial aid over the phone and through email they told me everything was fine loan/money-wise. Once I got there they told me I had to come with 17,000 through one of their private lenders. I looked for other places that offer loans there and most of them build interest while you are in school. The icing on the cake is on the first day of class you cannot get a refund on anything - housing/tuition ect. - you are locked in these horrible loans.
There was an orientation event where they were trying to sell their sports team alot. It was like a pep rally - they had a speaker that was so arrogant and full of himself, apparently he was a former student who become a artist. All he did was boast about how much better he was then every one else.
My advice, if you are extremely rich and like to pay for a school that wraps itself up in a cute ass little fashion to look like an art school - then maybe this is for you.
Are you a student and about to sign the very first lease in your li... more→
There are 134 Comments
Sort By: [Date] [Major] [Rating]