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The University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill

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I transferred into UNC after two years atBrightCommunications
I transferred into UNC after two years at my other universities honors college because I wanted more prestige, greater challenge, and admittedly fell for the hype machine of UNC being the most wonderful place on the planet. It's not. The town is an absolute dumpster fire, as far as quality of living. Unless drinking and going out is your exclusive idea of a good time, you're gonna have to go out to Durham and Raleigh to find anything resembling a fun time. The food and quality of stores on and around Franklin Street also contributes to this, whereas groceries will generally be fine for you the restaurants are complete garbage if you have any standard of health. As far as the school itself goes, for a "public ivy league" as students like to so frequently reinforce the myth of, it's a bit of a joke. Granted, my primary major is Communications which is not traditionally hard, but even courses I've taken in Economics, Computer Science, and Math have not been particularly difficult in terms of their content. There is a lot of grade deflation in the way that courses weigh their grades however, but they are still generally easy enough to pass as long as you show up. Professors are incredibly disengaged from my experience, mostly consisting of burn-out tenures just cashing it in for the check. The campus life itself varies. Students tend to be small town North Carolina kids or Charlotte/Raleigh suburban types, but the general impression is they let going to a decently ranked school get to their heads. You will deal with a lot of self-absorbed, entitled people here that may not be the entirety, but are absolutely a majority. Greek life is obnoxious as with most schools but you can ignore it. Other campus organizations though don't fair much better, with most clubs being light on actually doing anything if you're trying to build up a resume. For creative students, you're also kinda doomed. If you're into singing you could deal with one of the many terrible acapella groups, but two of them may as well be Greek life organizations with their exclusivity and snobbery. Theatre is very limited, as well as visual and film arts, so you don't have many options. The best I can say is sometimes, when the campus isn't under ridiculously unnecessary construction, it can look pretty. Overall, I'm gonna graduate soon and get a perfectly average degree from a throwaway school, and that's fine with me. It's just a shame I had to spend so much money and go through the trouble of transferring and got no benefit whatsoever.
2nd Year Male -- Class 2017
Campus Aesthetics: B-, Useful Schoolwork: F
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I recently transferred to UNC, so my commentNot so brightCommunications
I recently transferred to UNC, so my comment is partly tailored to that experience. I am an in-state student that did not get into Carolina out of high school, so I went to another in-state school for two years and then transferred. After the long up-hill climb, now I'm here, and I'm thinking maybe it wasn't such a bad thing I didn't get in in the first place. At my other school (which wasn't as elite, but still was good), I really had the ability to stand out. I was the president of organizations, involved in the community, had lots of friends by my sophomore year, etc. Here, in addition to having the feeling of starting all over again as a freshman at my new school, I am not nearly as academically competitive as I was, with my previous 3.75 GPA. But I expected that. What I didn't expect was the excruciating social atmosphere. If you are looking at UNC, as either a first year student, or as a transfer, you should take into account that this school caters to very specific types of personalities and interests. If you aren't within those bounds, or like me, are miles outside of them, prepare to polarized, isolated, and radicalized. I have been in mental and emotional deuress, really, from orientation on up to this day. The coursework is challenging here, but the emotional turmoil created by the academic and social atmosphere has made it significantly harder. To illustrate UNC's social environment, I will describe attributes of students that will probably love it here and do well: activist, academically a genius, no sense of humor, politically correct, judgmental, out to prove a point, try-hard, future moms of America, future boring dads of America, future boring people of America, overly-organized, power-walker, power hungry, wanna-be artist, ready to make a difference in the world by joining corporate America, conformist, pretentious, elitist, matter-of-fact, self-dignified, political, far-left collellectivist, far-right neocon, news-consuming-elitist, science-oriented, business-oriented, corporate-oriented, sports-oriented. Obviously, not everyone fits all of these categories, but I just wanted to illustrate some of the general vibes you will get. If you fit into a lot of the above categories, then maybe you'd love UNC! However, if you don't, or if you're like me and you're interested in going into the arts, you might want to look elsewhere. I see a lot of people calling UNC 'artsy'. Hahahahahahaha. That is laughable. UNC is not artsy, UNC is anti-art. They do however love sports, science, and lots and lots of soul-crushing, passion-extinguishing work. At orientation you will be told that 'following you passion' is BS. If you're looking in-state for more art friendly environments, UNCSA or UNCG may be better fits. And if you didn't get in to UNC from the get-go, that may have just been a sign that this was not a good fit for your personality. Why be miserable? Go somewhere where you will be valued and can let your colors shine. That denial letter may be the best thing that ever happened to you.
1st Year Male -- Class 2016
Collaboration/Competitive: A, Individual Value: F
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I felt the survey was quite limited soAverageCommunications
I felt the survey was quite limited so overall I love UNC. I do feel safe to walk around day or night but I still take precautions, not all students feel the same. Classes really depend on the Instructor since each has their own style. Generally when you pick a major you like you end up liking the professors you get in upper levels. The only problem with the school is that a certain population of the school is VERY closeminded and exist in a bubble. Often coming from very culturally isolated communities and they set up those same systems at the school. Unless you are one of them minimize contact with them as much as possible and you will have a good time.
4th Year Male -- Class 2008
Extracurricular Activities: A+, Innovation: B-
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The University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill
The University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill
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