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Brandeis University

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The good:BrightNeuroscience/Cognitive Science
The good:
-Faculty and teachers, most are brilliant and leaders in their fields.
-Small class sizes if you are not in an intro class.
-The social life is what you make it, if you want to party there are more than enough opportunities, but it is also very easy to stay in and study.

-The students match the brilliant faculty, everyone is very intelligent, but i have yet to meet someone cutthroat or snobby.

the bad:
-The campus is an acquired taste, the buildings are in a nontraditional / modern style.
-The freshman dorms range from very nice to almost ancient.
-The meal plans are required (much more expensive than using regular money).
-Athletics and Frat life are a small part of university life here, this was a dramatic change from most of the colleges i was looking at, it also took me a long time to get used to that fact.

1st Year Male -- Class 2013
Faculty Accessibility: A+, Campus Maintenance: C
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Brandeis University had a lot of negatives forQuite BrightNeuroscience/Cognitive Science
Brandeis University had a lot of negatives for me. It is pretty much full of upper middle class white kids, which really shows from the yearly drama as one dumb kid or another makes some racist comment or worse (this was before my time, but apparently some idiot was slurring Asian women on the campus radio station). I found the people I associated with to be nice... but woefully ignorant (one girl asked me if India could be lumped in with China, Japan, and "those other countries" at a cultural event she was planning, because they were basically the same).

As far as social lives go... err, they're almost nonexistent. Parties aren't a big thing around here, and many students are extremely socially awkward, although I have only had one or two experiences where my safety felt threatened -- it was by a student who most likely still attends Brandeis and had a history of stalking/borderline stalking female students. I understand nothing was done about him; rather, my concerns and the concerns of my friend (who was also one of his targets) were mostly dismissed because he had Asperger's.

Everything shuts down on weekends, which is part of a larger problem: the school really skimps on a lot of little things that could make going here a lot better. Transportation to Boston is by shuttle (weekends) or commuter rail (it can be up to two hours between trains), making getting around difficult. The shuttles into Waltham are chronically late. The cafeterias half shut down during Shabbat, leaving non-Jewish students with very limited options for food. The meal plans are mandatory. On the other hand, the entire campus gets a makeover (complete with rented flowers) when the campus tours for high school students start. The people at the Registrar's office can be downright nasty. And as for job propects after graduation... if your major is not one of the big ones (economics, law, etc.), tough cookies. You're pretty much on your own because there are so few events where employers come to campus. Housing is a mess.

As for professors, I have a feeling the liberal arts profs are overall kind, interested in what students have to say, and helpful (although insanely busy). However, many of the Neuro department professors pretty much only stop to give you the time of day if you're one of their favorite students. My opinion? Take Japanese with Prof. Sekino... preferably without grading if you're not good with languages. The workload is INSANE and it is tough (well, not for me), but all the students, even those that drop out in horror, end up being good friends. There are professors that really shine at this university. But the stupid administration, some of my fellow students, and my own department really took away from my experience. And I DEFINITELY don't think it was worth $20,000 a year (I had a scholarship -- it's really $40,000).

4th Year Female -- Class 2007
Scholastic Success: A, Education Quality: F
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First impressions of Brandeis University as a socialBrightLinguistics
First impressions of Brandeis University as a social environment in which to spend four years of your life and over a hundred thousand of your dollars may be that it is a warm, open-minded and fun place to be. As I've experienced it, if you're not the type of person who easily makes friends right off the bat in any social situation, you're not going to do well, at least in the beginning. Cliques form in a second, and tend to be quite exclusive. It's very hard to make friends after cliques form at the beginning of your time. It's especially hard if you're not a well-off, connected student in one of the popular majors (neuroscience, biochemistry or global studies, for example). Another anecdote to that end is that I'm from the midwest, and in my time here I have yet to meet a single person who's from within 200 miles of where I live. It can also be hard to make friends if you're not the type of person who goes out and parties (at any of Brandeis' really lame parties that get shut down before 1 am) every weekend. The people who you do meet are likely to be self-absorbed and won't last as your friends; they'll dump you for better friends who enjoy getting ratchet more than you or come from a more similar background as them (more often than not, it involves being Jewish to some end).

Academically speaking, you'll do very well if you're the type of person who appreciates breadth over depth in your education, enjoy immersing yourself in whatever takes your fancy one semester or another, are talented in many areas and enjoy letting academic advisors tell you what to do. Granted, there are many extremely interesting courses that I wish I could have taken in the past or could in the future; Brandeis is blessed with world-class faculty who are extremely passionate about their teaching and about enriching the students. Many faculty lead discussion-based courses, which is excellent if that's the type of course you like taking. Faculty are approachable and love working with and knowing their students, no matter how deep your interest is in their subject area. The rigour of the work is high; it comes in two stages. During your first year you're likely to take some lower-level classes, and the instructors will sometimes treat you as though you've never written a paper before, and other times they'll be flexible in terms of working with you at your level. Beyond these courses, stuff gets intense really fast. If that's what you're up for, then go for it - I personally enjoy a challenge academically, but if you want a place that you can just breeze through, it's not Brandeis - students in general here love the challenge of the coursework: it's central to the academic ethos of the school, and that's something to like a lot.

Now, Waltham is (and there's really no other way of putting it) a sh*thole. There's absolutely nothing to do and it isn't the safest place at night. Campus is very isolated as it's up on a hill and there's one road in/out (which is a HUGE drawback if you either enjoy going out or, like me, have to have a job and don't get helped by the university in finding a federal-work-study job on campus that you're qualified for - more on that later). Getting to Cambridge or Boston can be inconvenient at times. There are busses on the weekend from on campus, which sound convenient on paper, but are chronically late or canceled, and crowded. A regular bus service, the 553 stops outside campus and takes an hour to get into Boston via Newton. The commuter rail also stops right outside campus, but it's bloody expensive. Zipcar oneway is convenient from getting from doorstep to doorstep in terms of where you're going, but a car isn't always available near campus. Once you're in Boston or Cambridge, though, there's a wealth of things to do. Boston metro area also has many other universities that host events and parties.

The administration of the university is not the best. They try hard to listen to the students' needs, but in recent years have failed to effectively answer students' questions and qualms about the budget and how bloody expensive everything is, or, while still being pretty progressive compared to other universities in America, to address issues of diversity that have been brought to attention recently. (The student body is very much divided on issues of diversity; half are ignorant, rich, privileged white kids who don't understand issues facing marginalised demographics barely represented at Brandeis and in the real world, and half are socially conscious and occasionally hostile students who are very active in tackling issues of social justice - the latter half obviously includes the small percentage of students of colour and students who are from low-income backgrounds).

The resources at the university are mediocre. Academic resources like the library are really nothing special - I've gone to other universities nearby for academic material more so than gone to Brandeis' library. The health services are subpar, as well. The health centre is understaffed and not particularly friendly; the psychological counseling centre provides pretty good services, but it's almost impossible to get to them at all - speaking personally, it took me over a full semester to even book my first appointment due to being double-booked more than once.

The facilities are mixed. Dorm life is pretty crap freshman year - the buildings are outdated and the appliances are broken more often than not (I had no heat all winter and facilities services *never* came to fix it), and the dining hall food is absolute garbage (the people who prepare it are all warm-hearted, wonderful people who strive to please, but unfortunately the food they're given to prepare is awful). This is a trivial complaint, but since the school is not actually secular at all, we *never* have real bacon. The bottom line here is that if you're looking for an academically stimulating environment in which to delve into many of your interests and learn from world-class faculty just as passionate as you, and you aren't worried at all about social life, living on a college campus, caring about the community you live in or paying for all of it, then you've found the right school. If you're even remotely worried about any of the other above attributes, look elsewhere - it isn't worth 40k a year.

2nd Year Male -- Class 2018
Education Quality: A, Campus Aesthetics: D
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