New York University
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New York University - Comments and Student Experiences | |||||||||||||||||||
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I loved my first few weeks at NYU. Being away from home, meeting new friends and being in the heart of the city was something so new and fresh to me. But after about a month of living as a city dweller, the glitz and glam of the big apple wear off pretty fast. After welcome week, everyone has their group of friends. I made really great friends that lived in my dorm and we had some great times, but it was so hard to meet other people unless you joined a club or did a sport. Which of course, I did and made great friends that way as well. But I was probably the only one in my group of ten friends that had friends in other groups and actually did something.
Sure, NYU is a great school and the chances of you succeeding after graduation are very likely, but the academics at this school are not all too great from what they are hyped up to be. NYU is such a name school because so many famous and rich people go to school there, but all my classes had over 100+ in them, profs did not know your name, and you wasted so much time in recitations that it was just silly. The classes don't get small until your junior year. All of my friends had this problem. I think the only class my where a teacher knew my name was my 16 person writing class...the smallest class I probably would have ever had at NYU. If you keep up with the readings and go to class you will succeed at NYU no doubt about it.
The reason I hated NYU so much was for the social life. Hence the reason I am transferring and will begin my sophomore year someone else :). When people found out I was transferring they always asked why. My response: "It's not a college. Its so Boring."
"BORING?!?!?! HOW CAN NYC BE BORING" everyone would shout at me. Oh...come stay with me for a weekend and you will see. Inarguably the student body is filled with very intelligent and talented people. But THESE PEOPLE DO NOT KNOW HOW TO HAVE FUN. I'm not a raging alcoholic, but the environment of NYC is so stressful that I like to let loose once or twice on the weekend and have some fun. "FUN" at nyu is sitting in a dorm room with 10 people (MAX) and drinking pride and clark (cheap vodka) and rotting your life away inside a dorm. Probably the most pathetic excuse for a party ever. If you want Frats, house parties or any type of party with more than 10 people you know...or 10 people in general...DO NOT COME HERE. Sure there are clubs and bars galore in NYC...but as a college student a) fake ids are so expensive. b) cover fees are ridiculous. c) drinks are even more money and d) you go out with a small group of friends and never get to meet anyone from NYU. Essentially you just travel in your small group of friends all year.
In my year at NYU I got to know some upperclassman who had apartments and those parties were a little better than dorm parties, but still they sucked. Atleast we didn't have to worry about RA's. But its not worth waiting till your junior/senior year just so you can travel all over the city to go to an apt party with 15 people...and these apartments are all over...no one can afford anything by the college so have fun trying to get to brooklyn on the weekends. Sketch. sketch. sketch.
I was so upset my first semester because all I would see where my friends at their schools going to football games, huge parties, meeting millions of people and that was not the experience I had at all at NYU. During my second semester, I just gave up all hope for the NYU social life and just realized that it wasn't going to get any better, so I tried my best to make the most out of the situation.
This post is pretty negative, but I just want to send my warnings. NYU is overrated by far. Go to a cheap state school, and I'm sure you'll turn out just as fine.
If you don't like to drink, or have an endless cash-flow and have the ability to go to broadway shows, concerts, museums, and other cool things in the city, then NYU is for you. I made tons of friends who were completely happy having a small group of friends, and doing city type things. But if you are someone who likes big parties, nice people (oh because like 95% of the kids that go there are stuck up assholes who think they are so amazing and hip), and school spirit then DO NOT COME HERE. You will jump off bobst 10th floor. And IF YOU ARE STRAIGHT please do not come here. You will be even more depressed with the prude girls and over whelming amount of gay kids. I am gay myself, but I am a chill homo who doesn't advertise it around the world and who likes sports and other cool things. The homes at NYU are ridiculous and think they are the $hit.
The NYU dorms are actually pretty nice and the food is AMAZING. But the dorms are scattered everywhere across lower manhattan. I had friends who lived in china town.........some took subways to class.
Some people may be obsessed with the NYC lifestyle and think its all they want...but here's what you have to remember. NYC...like any city in america...will always be there for you waiting. Your college experience filled with school spirit, fun parties, football games, great teachers, huge groups of friends and small classes will not. You only live once...have fun before you enter the hell of the real world. And NYU (as advertised everywhere) is the real world. peace out.
First opinion:
Chances are, your first semester in NYU is going to be as tough as hell. It is hard to meet people because the university has no sense of community; I've met virtually all of my friends in my classes. Depending on where you dorm, your room might suck and, considering how many people I know who hated who they lived with by the end of the year, your roommates or suitemates may be worse (NYU may have you fill out that profile but unless you choose someone yourself they won't follow through with matching you up with someone compatible). You're going to have to learn time management and fast. Make sure you have your books before the first day of class and get ready to work the second day. This isn't high school anymore, kiddos.
NYU itself is just another part of the city--a bunch of organizations all spread out in vertical buildings and asphalt seeing random people come in day in and day out. Students very quickly become just New York City people, which is a mixed barrel of pros and cons. On one hand, you can brag to all of your friends back home that you go to museums for your humanities class and Times Square is so "ew." It also (willingly for some, unwillingly for others)forces you to grow up and learn independence, unlike a university with a grass-filled campus that is happy with the idea of coddling you. On the other hand, NYU sees you as a city person too--and, more importantly, one of their consumers--so you're just another number and they want your money. Financial aid sucks and you will always hear conflicting policies from your adviser and your friends and their advisers (for example, a classmate shared with the class that her adviser said electives you take in LSP won't count towards your later major. Honestly, I say fuck it and do the classes anyway, because the school is so big there's no one around to ride around on your back and see what you're doing). I've heard people complain about the bureaucracy as a whole, but that's something I disagree with. If your toilet's clogged in your private bathroom (YAY! No community showers in NYU!) That can be fixed by sending out a form to the dorm maintenance that takes less than five minutes to fill out. The health center, which has been updated recently due to the large amount of mentally and emotionally ill individuals that attend the school and the three suicides that took place in the library, is excellent. Housing will be just as excellent if you go to the health center frequently for any issues that fall into the above mentioned "mental or emotional" category and if it's a period of time where there's room available.
Most importantly, NYU will never look bad when it's on your job application! Yes, Stern and Tisch are considered to be among the cream of the crop of their respected fields when ranked against all the other universities in the country; but the rest are not so bad either especially for the humanities. We have the #1 Philosophy department and #15ish English department and, despite a bunch of whiners telling you so, the Liberal Studies Program is NOT a bad program at all.
(WHICH BRINGS ME TO MY MAIN ARGUMENT)
Most of the professors in LSP are great and they work hard in teaching you how to think critically and how to put those ideas properly onto paper. Business students DO NOT learn this, not even in Stern. There have been articles highlighting the advantages of the skills liberal arts classes teach you. Studies have shown that we're better at puzzling problems out and forming cohesive arguments than those who don't have liberal arts backgrounds. I can tell you that I have learned how to think in different ways about different subjects in almost every class I've been in, including the 2-semester pain-in-the-ass writing. Check ratemyprofessors.com, get the most brilliant, and learn all about more ancient cultures and art, philosophy and trains of thought, paper-writing and idea-planning than you ever wanted to know, but hey! Turns out some of this stuff is actually pretty cool!
End original argument. This is coming from me, the person who thought LSP would be a pain in the ass when it came to forming my major for Gallatin--which obnoxiously had the easiest core curriculum, but now is in the same boat as the rest of us--and would be a total waste of time. I ended up being one of the few that enjoyed the program, because I can see it was really worth it. JOHN SEXTON, our university president, loves it. You can't say much against that.
As a last note, always remember: the first year is the hardest in any college. It's even more difficult in NYU because you have to adjust to the city at the same time you adjust to your new life out on your own where time management is harder than you ever dreamed while in high school. But once you get comfortable you'll be grateful for all that surrounds you. In the city, you never have an excuse to be bored or hungry because there are endless things to do and an uncountable number of kinds of food and restaurants you can visit. Sure, sometimes you will get angry at NYU for not always working out like the way we all dream and other times you'll feel like an ant in an anthill (excuse me for the cliche, which my last semester Writing professor would kill me for using if she knew) because of the city. But, overall, if you can survive the first year you're going to be alright in the end. Trust me, it's worth it.
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