The University of California - Davis
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The University of California - Davis - Comments and Student Experiences | |||||||||||||||||||
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I'm a bright, determined student and even I can't graduate in four years. First, you can't get classes. You have to show up to every section of the lower division courses and try to fight your way in. Good luck even getting on the wait list for some upper divs. If you could get into every class, you might be able to graduate in four, but don't count on it. Second, the quarter goes by so fast that even if you just miss a week of school for the flu you can get so far behind that you have to retake the quarter. Using office hours to catch up is impossible - usually a professor has two hours of office time for 300+ students, so there's really no time for one on one interaction.
If you ever get into academic trouble (I missed a quarter from being sick) all you get is threatening letters demanding you see an adviser, but by the the third week of the quarter they have literally no appointments left, so you have to battle it out in the rush on the biosci advising office. After trying to get in so many times, I finally pushed people out of the way, rushed to the front desk, and filled out the "before we meet with you" form with brief nonsense. I managed to get in that time.
When you visit UC Davis they show you the first year dorms, brag about their student services, and are friendlier than the people at Disneyland. And sure first year goes great but then they just forget about you. They don't even have adequate student housing, so you have to rent in Davis where there's no renter protection besides the overflowing small claims court. It becomes a commuter school after first year. On campus apartments are ridiculously expensive and impossible to get into. You have to be married, have a kid, or know someone who's in already and sublet from them.
Basically, you're on your own. You have to fight for every ounce of attention you get. The university just doesn't care about you, and wouldn't have time to deal with you if they wanted to. The people that work there are friendly but have no substance - the majority will just smile at you and then not help you.
If this was the end of my first year, this would be a glowing review. But by now I'm sick of the smiley staff and how determined they are at being unhelpful. I'm tired of having to cover rent for a roommate who won't pay because most apartments only take one rent check. I'm tired of dealing with security issues with my roommate's crazy boyfriend because the campus offers no student housing. I'm angry at how behind I got after one quarter and how now one can be bothered to help me. I'm sick of lectures with 300+ people that move so fast there's no room to breath or be interested in the material.
And I'm sick of biking in Davis! It's either raining sideways or 100 degrees out. Bike-town my bum. So basically, if you don't mind spending five years in school, never get sick, never have an issue, and don't ever need or want advising, go for it. If you're a normal human, pay for a private school. By the time you graduate at UC Davis, you will have paid enough for a small private school with a modest scholarship or financial aid.
I did not enjoy my first year. I did not make a ton of friends. I found my dorm life stagnant. It was intellectually cold, compared to my high school (sad). Many of the lower-division classes are taught boringly, with boring discussion sections, and even more boring students. I found the cafeteria food dull, and the overall design of my dorms/living area artificial and bland. At this point, I felt a bit of regret/disappointment going to this school.
However. I am part-way into my third year, and life is much more interesting. I've immersed myself with the davis experience. I live with a few awesome people, live close to campus (a must), eat super well (due to the convenience of an A+ farmer's market and several mind-boggling grocery stores), know a bunch of cool people, and partake in the cycling culture that can be found nowhere else in the country.
The engineering school is top notch. Most of the faculty are doing crazy research, on par with the most famous universities. Many students don't notice this. classwork can be rigorous, getting A's is not a cakewalk. the curves can be steep.
The humanities departments are OK, but I don't recommend (due to job options, school of less recognition). The classes i took/sat in were simply not engaging...
Who said cow-town didn't have girls? there are aplenty, even attractive ones. the social life is ok. like any school you have to know people basically... But to find interesting people with interesting backgrounds is rare. There are happy, complacent people everywhere though.
In every way Davis is the little brother of Berkeley: the academics are not as strong, the partying is not as intense, and the athletics are not even close. Some may disagree, but intellectually Davis is lacking. People don't freely discuss politics in detail, figure out what an integral really means, and so forth. I can't help but say I would rather have gone to a liberal arts school or better name institution, for the sake of meeting people with more ambition and interesting backgrounds. A smart friend once told me that Davis is utopian. The population is very well-educated, many families are affluent, and crime-rate is low. But very few students will take this into consideration.
Are you a student and about to sign the very first lease in your li... more→
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