Pensacola Christian College
StudentsReview ::
Pensacola Christian College - Extra Detail about the Comment | |||||||||||||||||||
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Educational Quality | A | Faculty Accessibility | A- |
Useful Schoolwork | C | Excess Competition | B+ |
Academic Success | B+ | Creativity/ Innovation | B- |
Individual Value | B+ | University Resource Use | A |
Campus Aesthetics/ Beauty | A | Friendliness | A- |
Campus Maintenance | A+ | Social Life | A- |
Surrounding City | B+ | Extra Curriculars | B+ |
Safety | A+ | ||
Describes the student body as: , ' color='class=grade' > Describes the faculty as: |
Useful Schoolwork | C |
Campus Maintenance | A+ |
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Major: (This Major's Salary over time)
The nursing program was wonderful, but not quite as 'exceptional' as they might like to think. The nursing students are usually a little brighter than the average on campus, however opening the program to 120 students/yr was a mistake. The nursing faculty was, for the most part, exceptional. Not because of their talent or brilliance, but their sincere desire to help Christians become exemplary, ethical nurses. Ask about critical points. Mistakes were often seen as moral failures which is really hard for some of us to brush off. Personally, it took all the fun and learning out of clinical. I graduated in 2006, and am a month away from a masters degree from a private university in the northeast. I never had a problem with accreditation. The program was approved by Florida's BON, and it looks like the school will retroactively accredited (back to 1995) in 2012. All said, I attended PCC, graduated debt free and passed my boards the first time. When I applied to graduate school, I was accepted by both private and state universities for various nurse practitioner programs. PCC accomplished everything I needed it to and gave me a few dear friends along with it. I'd call that a success.