Temple University
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Though most are pretty open, some clubs and groups on campus are similarly afflicted. As a journalism student, I have to get "clips" by writing for The Temple News, but those in charge seem perplexed when someone not already on the paper wants to write for them. (It doesn't help that the paper is lackluster, and just a step above tabloid status since it's mostly living and entertainment-oriented) You never hear about most clubs, and meeting times and locations often change. Many of them are hard to participate in as a commuter, as it seems you need to stay on campus until later in the evening, when most meet. If you have a job, it's even harder.
Also, Temple is no longer a commuting school. With the erection of Morgan Hall (a questionable use of Temple funds at this time), the university is striking out for "big campus" status. (NOTE: IF YOU'RE A COMMUTER, PREPARE FOR NO SOCIAL LIFE. It's pretty hard to make friends if you're not on campus all the time.) The campus isn't terribly attractive, though it's not fractured like Drexel's nor a nonentity like CCP's. Room/board rates are ridiculous, and your only real financially-savvy option is to room with a bunch of other people well off campus; sometimes renting a house can be cheaper and a better option than Temple's on-campus housing. Most of the places open to students off-campus, however, are hardly more than glorified tenement houses. If there is a "revitalization" going on in North Philadelphia, I have yet to see it. It's still a pretty scuzzy, dodgy place.
As regards academics, they're not the most rigorous. This is made worse by the compulsory GenEd requirements, which are often in arcane and not terribly applicable areas and cut into your major requirements. The average Temple student isn't terribly bright, and the idiotic YOLO-party mentality is pungent in the air. There's a lot of people enrolled in STEM majors who really just have no aptitude for them, but are fueled by the recession-myth of greater employability and, quite simply, more money. The recent consolidation of CLA and Presser/Tyler School of Art is somewhat troubling. Still, I've yet to have a problem with any of my professors (most are adequate -which is no fault- though some really are good), and advising has always gone pretty smoothly. The journalism program is pretty top-notch and New Media-oriented.In sum, Temple's alright academically but shit socially. It's depressing but I'm trying to make the best of it, as transferring anywhere else isn't really an option financially-speaking.
I've really enjoyed the academics at Temple. Some people advised me to attend a small, liberal arts college, but I've been pleasantly surprised with the academics here. Believe it or not, every single professor I had this year was excellent. It helped that I'm in the humanities (there's few required required courses only taught by one prof, so you have a lot of liberty to choose who you want). Some of my friends in the sciences have had positively sadistic professors, but in any field, there's always a few good ones. It's great being in Philadelphia, because sometimes professors assign fieldwork in the city or may take your class to a museum. Temple has almost every class you could imagine, from glassblowing to Vietanmese to hydrology to Renaissance music performance. One downfall is that it is extremely difficult to major in or even take classes in totally different fields. I know people at other colleges combining interests like Flute Performance and Chemistry, but stringent requirements here make that a rarity. I'm in the Honors Program and it's great having the benefit of priority registration and access to small class sizes. However, I do feel that the Honors Program is limitting, in that you have to have at least 10 honors courses. If you're in a major with few free credits, then you basically have to take all your upper level coureses through honors, meaning you can't dabble in areas of your discipline that you're interested in. Oh yeah: Temple has tons of grants for undergraduate research ($2,500+)
Now for the absolutely worst part of Temple: the bureaucracy. I was investigating an accelerated degree program, fast forward four months, and suddenly all traces of the program disappeared. I emailed some staff members to find out if it was still available, no response. Someone finally got back to me only to deny that the program was ever existant. I was ready to give up, then a month later, someone told me "Hey, it's available and accepting applications!" It turns out that the program was suspended. Miscommunication here is rampant. If you attend Temple, you must be proactive and willing to fact check any information a staff member gives you. It's also important to know that getting a work study is very difficult. Temple rarely updates the job bank online--I applied for one position only to receive an email "sorry, we filled that April last year!" Your best bet in terms of finding a job is to subscribe to as many Listservs as possible--that's where the /available/ jobs can be found.
If you're shy and/or have limitted time to devote to making friends (i.e. you have tons of obligations and can't devote hours each day going to events/"hanging out" in hopes of hitting it off), Temple isn't the most conducive atmosphere to build relationships. I was sick of my small high school, seeing the same people everday, but I didn't realize that by being with the same folks in English, math, and art, you have a high likelihood of developing friendships, whereas at Temple, you'll most likely have different people in each class (less exposure=less opportunities to connect). I equated 30,000 students with much more friends than one might have at, say, a college of 2,000, but I feel rather isolated here, like 90% of the time I'm surrounded by strangers. Walking around campus, it's rare that I run into a friend or even a classmate.
So...living on campus. The dorms here are actually really nice, aside from Peabody. I lived in 1300. It's a beautiful, modern suite/apartment building, private bathrooms=yay! I do think it is more difficult to make friends in suite-style housing. If you hit it off with your suite-mates, awesome! But if you don't, well everyone else is hanging out in their own suite, sorry. I didn't realize how much of a party school Temple was until I attended; definitely, the majority of the school is out getting drunk on Friday nights. Temple's food is all over the spectrum. At the beginning of the year, it was phenomenal: made-to-order stirfrys, cheesecake, delicious pizza. However, as you approach a break, the food goes sharply down hill, and by the last month, pasta is hard, entrees are cold, salad is wilted.
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