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Kalamazoo College

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I attended Kalamazoo for one year, and thenQuite BrightChemistry
I attended Kalamazoo for one year, and then transferred to the University of Michigan. I went there to play basketball. The basketball coach was the only good part of the school- he's a great guy. However, the school itself was awful. It costs almost $40,000 a year to go there, and honest to God, I don't know where the money goes. There are no campus events, theres only one basketball court for the whole school (which is usually reserved for varsity sports) and the cafeteria closes at 7. Around 40% of the students were gay, and probably 75% were the artsy type. The party life is nonexistent- the only way to do anything remotely close to partying was to go over to Western. The surrounding city of Kalamazoo was awful too. The Burger King down the street from campus closed at 10 for the drive-thru. I've never heard of such a thing. I ended up taking the train home most weekends, but even the train station was bad- hobos used to get in fights and require police intervention constantly. I pray that you take this advice to heart and come to the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. I couldn't be happier with my decision- I've met a ton of friends, taken great classes, gotten internships, and I'm going to be studying abroad- not to mention getting a degree from one of the most recognizable and respected institutions in the country.
1st Year Male -- Class 2013
Campus Aesthetics: B+, University Resource Use/ spending: F
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I was an average high school student, who,Chemistry
I was an average high school student, who, for the first time, discovered that I enjoyed academic pursuits at Kalamazoo College. The faculty were supportive, and there was relatively little pressure compared to other more selective schools where the quality of education is similar. I have returned several times, and they continue to provide a strong environment for learning.

This was also a great school to discover one's own interests and talents. The liberal arts experience was quite stimulating, particularly because the introductory subjects were taught be enthusiastic and highly competent professors. The faculty were amazingly accessible, and enjoyed interacting with students.Overall, the school prepared me well for graduate school. I am currently an endowed professor at an Ivy League University. I credit K. College with much of my success as a professor.

Alumnus Male -- Class 2000
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Kalamazoo College was the school I was reallyBrightPolitical Science
Kalamazoo College was the school I was really hoping to get into when I did my college applications my senior year of high school. I really wanted to go there, due to all the great things I had heard about the school, the staff, the campus, the atmosphere, and everything about it. I applied to it early decision because I wanted to go there so badly, and found out in December from an letter that was hand delivered to me by members of the admissions department that I got in (and honestly, I was surprised I got in because it was supposedly a very competitive year.) But after being at school for a couple quarters, I realized that it was not at all what I thought it would be.

I knew that it was supposedly a slightly "dorky" school, where smart, but slightly odd went, where they could all fit in and strive to do well together, but the environment ended up being, to me, quite negative. The students were all incredibly competitive and closed-minded (it is a very liberal school) and even for someone like me who is quite moderate and empathetic to both sides, can end up being shot down by a student or professor for having an alternate view, no matter how small.

Kalamazoo also prides itself on the hundreds of different student-created groups that it has, but the groups end up having very few people in it (the largest groups being 15, the average being about 6 people), and having very little funding.

I also went to kalamazoo because it really promoted its music department, and said that it had several student orchestras that I could participate in. I had been an active violinist all throughout high school, and was really excited to continue with orchestra at the college level, but the orchestra was nothing like I had read about or been told by the college. The orchestra was 60% community members, so most students sat with older adults, ages 40+, and as a freshman, it was incredibly difficult to get to know other students when I was surrounded by adults (my standpartner was a fellow students grandmother). So the student atmosphere I had anticipated for the orchestra was non existent. And the new, young conductor it had tended to be very crabby, and would yell at students who were not playing up to snuff, verbally attacking them in front of the entire orchestra. And the lack of students in the orchestra was not due to the few students the school has, but due to the intensive cuts the conductor made so that the orchestra could be mostly community members, and few students so that it could be "at the level he thought it should be". So the musical environment I had looked forward to and expected was not there at all.

*********Finally, the GPA system was absolutely ridiculous. From what professors and admissions directors said, the average GPA at Kalamazoo college was around a 2.7, which one would expect to be a bit higher since the college is always talking about the "intellectual students" it has, and how brilliant all we students were. But it was virtually impossible to get an A in several classes. The college works on a GPA scale that says that an A and A- is a 4.0, a B+, B, and B- is a 3.0, a C+, C, and C- is a 2.0 and so on. And that sounds great if you got an A- and your GPA went down as a 4.0 for that class, but the problem was that many professors simply "did not give A's" as several of my professors had told me my freshman year. Due to the way the GPA system worked, many professors, in order to keep their class rigorous, and so that they would not reward students for what they did not think was "4.0 material" they would give students who deserved A-'s B+'s instead. It doesn't seem like a huge difference, and wasn't in high school, but with the way that GPA works, you would get a 3.0 GPA instead of a 3.5, which looks terrible on an application to grad school if they don't know the school (which most out of state schools don't). So the classes were made unfair, and made it incredibly difficult to get a good GPA, even with just one B range grade.

Not to mention, the social life was virtually non-existent, especially winter quarter, when the school seems to turn into a barren, VERY cold desert. It isn't uncommon to be walking around campus at midday on a week day and see no one outside, or a weekend evening, and to see NO ONE. The social life outside of a few parties at the FEW nearby houses on campus was incredibly weak, if that.thus, I was incredibly disappointed with kalamazoo college, I felt that all the hype I had heard and all the information it had given me about its reputation was untrue, so I transferred schools after my freshman year. I originally had no plans to do so, and tried as hard as I could to make the school more fun, but the abysmal social life, the lame student groups, and the ridiculous GPA system forced me to move elsewhere. I'm no partier, so I thought Kalamazoo would be a great place for me, but after a year, I knew it was time to move to a better, more lively school that didn't make me miserable.

1st Year Female -- Class 2011
Campus Maintenance: A-, Scholastic Success: F
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Kalamazoo College
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