The University of Michigan Business School - Ann Arbor
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The University of Michigan Business School - Ann Arbor | |||||||||||||||||||
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If you want to join a learning community, JOIN! I didn't join one, but I lived in Alice Lloyd and saw how much fun and how close the people in my hall got with their learning community when they did their homework or projects. I really regret not looking more closely at the information about the learning communities here. They definitely are not a burden on your academic life and you will instantly make new friends before you go to your first class!
For the general student:
Work hard (you're not the only one who wants an A in the class). It's a very different life here in U-M. Classes and the way it's graded are totally different from what you've experienced in high school. I had to struggle to fit into the academic scheme of things during my first few months of school even after attending a college prep school. Focusing and hard work don't come easily, especially when the Fall Term is full of Welcome Week activities, Welcome Back frat parties, and football games. Try and head to the libraries to do your studying because the dorms can be very noisy (especially Markley and Bursley). Exams are hard and it is recommended by pretty much everyone to prepare a week or two ahead of time (because most of your mid-terms and finals will fall on the same week, if not the same day--the school won't allow you to reschedule your exams unless 4 fall on the same day).
Clubs and Orgs...
There are currently 1295 clubs here in U-M. In other words, it is very easy for you to find a club that suits you here in Michigan. There is a very active a capella society and a very, very active social Greek community. There are also numerous mutli-cultural groups and Greek communities that one can be a part of here in U-M. It's also very easy to start your own club here and is encouraged. There are also many student governments within the school you are assigned to (LSA, Ross, etc.), dorms (Residence Hall Association and the Multi-cultural Groups in each dorm), Michigan Student Assembly, etc. There are also other ways you can be involved in leadership through positions in clubs. It is rare but definitely not impossible (because I have personally seen it happen) that a freshman gets assigned to a board position in his club after his first semester here. So, don't be discouraged by the fact that you are only a freshman. Make sure you really put yourself out there. Try new things! It's what University of Michigan is all about.
Dorms...
You don't really have a lot of control over where you live. The only way you can be guaranteed a spot in a dorm is if you are 1) trying to get into one of the 3 all-female residence halls (Martha Cook, Helen Newberry, and Betsy Barbor), 2) trying to get into a learning community (i.e. MCSP, LHSP, HSSP, MRC, WISE, RC, etc.), or 3) you're in the Honors College (so, South Quad, unless you are part of a learning community, then you can choose elsewhere).
Nevertheless, I am going to talk about the dorms anyways (since I think people are usually the most excited about this part of the process anyways). Unfortunately, if you get placed in North Campus (Bursley Hall, Baits 1, Baits 2, and the Northwood Apartments), you get to commute every single day to get down to Central Campus where most of your classes are going to be (it's almost a 25 minute bus ride, especially in the winter when you need to account for snow). Life in North Campus is extremely quiet. So, if you enjoy nature and a quieter lifestyle, North Campus is the place to be. Bursley does get rowdy sometimes, especially with drunk freshmen on the weekends, but that just comes as part of the package of living in the third largest dorm in the nation. Only Bursley have the dining hall, so that's where most of my North Campus friends usually eat. They say it's pretty good, and I had brunch there once and found it enjoyable (just not the best--sorry, little biased). Baits 1 and 2 I hear have pretty quiet halls every day of the week. Northwood is just dead silent because they are apartments, so dorm life/social scene is difficult in the first place. However, Northwood residents get a living room and a kitchen.
The next part of campus is the Hill [Neighborhood], which is about 10-15 minutes away from campus. The Hill is composed of Alice Lloyd (rennovated for the 2011-12 school year), Couzens, Mosher-Jordan (aka MoJo), Stockwell, and Markley. Markley is the biggest of the 5 and is the loudest dorm on campus. It is sadly not exaggerating that the ambulance is putting students on stretchers 7 days a week. However, that is the nature of their dorm (especially if you live in the back of the dorm). Alice Lloyd is famous for being the quiet, where-the-heck-is-this-dorm reputation. So, the resident advisors here are usually really laid-back. I'm a little biased since that's where I lived. However, Alice Lloyd is home to the most biggest rooms on campus (so, I was really lucky to be randomly placed here--one of the few that is not part of either learning communities in my dorm lol). MoJo is home to the Hill Dining Center (although Markley does have their own dining hall, but is not open as long as the Hill Dining Center and is not open on weekends). MoJo is famous for their extremely quiet dorm and strict residential advisors. They also don't have as much of a social scene as most dorms. You won't able to be placed in this dorm randomly starting in the Fall 2011 because it will strictly be for MRC and WISE learning communities. It is also currently the only freshman dorm to be air-conditioned (until Couzens is finished with their renovations).
The central campus is home to 4 co-ed dorms (North Quad, East Quad, South Quad, and West Quad) and the 3 all-female dorms. North Quad is reserved for soph, jrs, and srs. East Quad is mostly made up of people in the RC and MCSP learning community and is home to the vegan dining hall. It is also where orientations are held. South Quad and West Quad is where student athletes live (for the small portion of the dorms). South Quad is home to the Honors College and also has a dining hall. West Quad also has a dining hall is connected to the student union (extremely helpful when it comes to finding a place to study or eat). Of the three all-female dorms, Martha Cook is the prettiest and most prestigious. They have guy-hours (so, when guys can go in the dorm to visit). They also have tea-time and dining time as a hall (slightly formal--no jeans). You need to apply to get into Martha Cook, but you can simply request to live in Barbour and Newberry. Newberry residents will need to head over next door to Barbour for dining. Although Barbour and Newberry aren't as nice as Martha Cook, they are still very nice--they look like sorority houses. All central campus dorms are located right next to all the main buildings for your classes (so, no worries about waking up 5 minutes before your class starts).
There is only one dorm in south campus--Fletcher Hall, which houses only about 75 residents (only dorm to have less than 100). It is very small and private. It is about 15 minutes away from central campus but is also the closest dorm to the Big House. It is also facing Elbel Field, so you will definitely be able to clearly hear every single marching band practice. Unfortunately, Fletcher does not have a dining hall, so you will need to head up to South Quad to eat.
There is one dorm that is practically off-campus: Oxford. Unfortunately, Oxford is located near the frat and sorority houses, so you will hear a lot of parties during the weekends. It is also the dorm with the highest crime alert (but for very petty crimes and is usually due to the atmosphere of the Greek community). Oxford residents will also, like North Campus residents, require bus transportation to anywhere on campus. However, luckily, Oxford buses come every 10 minutes, unlike North Campus buses. You will get your very own basketball court and a courtyard space with outdoor grills. It also have its own dining hall that serves breakfast and dinner on the weekdays. Some houses will have kitchens. Oxford is not quite like any other dorms. For one, it's not just one building. It's a complex comprising eight smaller houses, each probably housing about 45 residents. Although U-M Housing Department considers Oxford as part of the Hill Neighborhood, it is actually 20 minutes away from the Hill and is about 10 minutes east of East Quad.
The three big dining hall are Bursley, MoJo, and South Quad, which are the only dorms that are open continuously from 7am to about 9pm and on weekends. All other dining halls are closed on weekends and are only open for a couple hours for each meal (usually inconvenient due to the times of your classes). If you have classes near North Quad and it's open, you should definitely go in and check it out. North Quad is the newest dorm (and is definitely a 5-star hotel in design). The food there is almost as good as MoJo (biased, I know but I personally think MoJo does have the best food on campus). North Quad is very conveniently located across from the MLB (where most of the foreign languages will be taught) so it is quite convenient if you ever need a quick lunch from a dining hall nearby. It is available for freshmen even if you can't live there yet!
You will also need to spend your dining dollars, which come with your meal plan (and that comes along with living in the dorms). Your meals and dining dollars do not roll over from school year to school year. You will need to spend all of these two parts of your meal plan by the end of each school year as they are non-refundable. You can only spend your dining dollars in residential cafes. They will be located in Cafe ConXion and Ciao Down Pizzeria in South Quad; East Quad Cafe, Victors in MoJo, Hideaway in Markley, Oxford Express, Blue Apple in Bursley, North Star in Baits, and Java Blue Cafe in North Quad.
For Business Majors (because I am also a Ross hopeful):Get Malone or Gerson for Econ 101! They will help you be very successful and knowledgeable in Econ. Also, it's recommended that you don't take both Math 115 (Calc I) with Econ 101, especially if you will be seeing calculus for the first time in college. This is so that you can focus on either Econ 101 or Math 115 in each semester. It is also recommended that you don't take Math 115 during the fall, though, because that is when all the engineering students have to take it. If you passed Calculus I (whether by placement exam or AP/IB exam), Ross still recommends (aka expects) that you take another quantitative reasoning class (you will see which courses are approved for quantitative reasoning when you get your course guide in the summer and when you register for classes). Make sure you also maintain a GPA of 3.5 or above with the other classes you take. Ross doesn't care what other classes you take outside their required classes (Math 115, Eng 125--or whatever class you took to fulfill your first-year writing requirement: a list of approved courses will be in the course guide, Econ 101), so take considerably easier ones like Soc 100-102, Psych 111, Ling 111, or Anthrcul 101. Ross will not be happy if you take all quantitative reasoning courses just to try and impress them. They will be looking for individuality. Also, don't worry--they know it's hard to get a leadership position in clubs your freshman year. So, try and get on a committee or something that makes you more than just another member. Make sure for your admission essay that you get it read by a current Ross student (they always know what to look for or the style it should be written). Make sure you go to a Ross Info Session and a Ross Essay Workshop even if you don't feel you need it because they will be taking attendance of the people that registered AND showed up (for obvious reasons). Also, if you are invited, join the Ross Preparation Initiative (PI) program. They will be bonus points on the application (not a guarantee of admission, just bonus points). PI will guide you every step of the way to help make your transition to college easier and to help you in the application process for Ross. PI will also provide you will mentors for Math 115 and Econ 101. They will also give you a peer mentor who are past PI students to talk to throughout the school year about Ross or any other college experiences you want to find out more about from a student who has been in your shoes. You will also be given a Ross professor to be your academic advisor that will be a person you report to on almost any aspect of your college life: academic, social, and family. They will help keep your priorities straight and your life in order.
I live in the dorms for the entire time. Living off-campus= expensive, not good bang for buck and safe? hah. it's drinking paradise once you get do to geddes and hill st.
I knew a range of people from the naive freshman to the OMG if I get a less than a 4.0 I'ma freak out.
One person being a triple major and maintaining nearly a 4 GPA even while taking first year graduate courses. Another typical I must go to med school do everything guy but I still am able to play video game RPGs and Halo every night. And the untypical laidback engineering student who would get As and make fun of the liberal arts college.
There were rich people who were full of themselves and said blah blah blah I have money lalalala. driving cars and humping their girls at night. I hated them.
I tried to be a nice guy. Kept my door open most of the time. Met some really nice people. I didn't know what beer pong was until junior year.
I did see some reverse discrimination but it's a very liberal campus. What can you expect? Just take the telemarketer approach with that if you want to. They claim diversity but what I mostly saw was people of the same race always finding their own niche in associations...etc. maybe that was just me.
MSA- the student assembly....cares more about Darfur than the university students. which IMO is kinda whack.
Advisors- you gotta be pointed with them. don't ask general, vague questions with them. ask specifics. and seriously after one or two visits freshman year, you should be ok and on track. you don't need the general advisors to tell you diff courses to take, that should be left to your concentration advisor.
Academics
Freshman classes: filled with pre-whatever people (freshman) trying to have an orgy with the professor whenever they wanted a good grade aka A+.
Memorizing till you die. If you can...take these courses over summer.
Pre-Med classes: meh. very competitive. beware intro bio. If you already have AP Bio. Run away from it and take genetics. intro bio was death for me and pre-med.
study and time manage. also try to go into univ hosp to volunteer and stuff.
Business classes: Very set. They have a set of courses for you to take. 4 accounting courses and some business mgmt and stats courses. it's like HS where the counselors pick the classes for you. somewhat elitist but brush it off
Econ classes: 401- most diff. class. (intermediate micro) lots of HW. 402- easier. (int. macro)
The rest of the upper level econ classes just require you to know the models learned in 401 or 402 and applying them to weird and diff secenarios.
I can't say much about the rest of the majors, but be prepared for lots of reading and writing.
if you can, take a language placement test and get rid of your foreign langugage req. you'll be glad you did. do it during orientation.
especially spanish at this college is very oral-based.
if you have ap calc (AB or BC) go for either Math 116 (Calc II)- considered to be very difficult because of the application of it. or Math 215 (Calc III) don't take 115 (Calc I) if you don't have to. it's team-based hw and tests and gateways which are like 30-min 7 question performance tests where you can't get less than one wrong or else your grade is affected.
AP vs classes here- no correlation.
lots of paper writing in other classes...such as Political Science
lots of freshman love to go to the library and study. The undergrad library (UGLI)
tuition-wise- Plan well...each yr tuition seems to be going up a few thousand.
Profs- A few can't teach, some are overdramatic, and some are really good down to earth people. Just try your best in class.
Summary- You need to be proactive at this college. There's a lot of clubs out there. It's all about time management. Don't annoy the profs like being one of the three people in a 500-person lecture hall to ask random questions every day.
Keep your head up.
When it's winter, don't feel down...just grab your winter jacket and attack that snow like it's a paper. It'll pass soon.GL HF.
Kansas City Art Institute (MO) 1:negative
Regis University (CO) 1:negative
Texas State University (TX) 1:negative
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Inevitably, there are drawbacks. It seems that University is fairly restricting at times. There are a lot of requirements, which does not fit well for all students. Furthermore, it is helpful if one feels comfortable reaching out to people and resources around them (these skills, however, are developed in time). There are people willing to help if you reach out to them. Furthermore, it seems that the University makes it difficult to study abroad relative to other institutions, particularly if one is majoring in business. Lastly, the grading seems to be a poor reflection of one's ability to utilize and understand the class material. There are sometimes curves that are difficult to compete with. This, however, should not intimidate you, as these are common grading problems across many institutions.Overall, the University of Michigan is a great place to go to college.
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