Randolph College
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Randolph College - Comments and Student Experiences | |||||||||||||||||||
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I'm impressed by the diversity of the student body. For a small population, there are students from many states and countries. There are up to 15% international students and I love the fact that everyone has many different cultural backgrounds to bring and share. And several times a year, we organize an international dinner that is absolutely amazing. I learned how to make sushis, curry preparations, naans, crepes, and baklavas just by cooking in the same kitchen as other students.
The professors I have had so far are devoted to their job and many have long and flexible office hours, which I like to use for one-on-one questions after lectures, advice on homework, and to spot summer research opportunities. Randolph has an on-campus summer research program that gives you a pretty nice stipend and the opportunity to present your work at a national conference afterwards. I have participated in two summer research programs and got to go to San Francisco and Washington D.C., all paid for by the College. It was a great experience. I got to meet grad school professors and people working in the industry who said were impressed with the quality of my presentation.
The lectures are of good quality, but by far the most challenging aspect of my time at Randolph has been to keep up with the high amount of required reading and paper redaction. The professors' expectations are quite high, but I received some help from the on-campus "writing lab" students, mostly during my first year at Randolph, which allowed me to improve the quality of my writing over time.
During my free time, I'm a NCAA D3 athlete for tennis, I help out at the campus organic garden (which has chickens and honeybees!), and I really like to use the campus bike share program to ride from campus to downtown Lynchburg through the Blackwater Creek Trail, an old re-purposed train track that runs through the forest and has tons of off-trail dirt paths.
All-in-all, my experience has been outstanding. Randolph got a lot more to offer than what met my eye when I first got in. The college is also in a growing phase, which tells me the value of my diploma will only grow as the years go by. Our President told the campus a few weeks ago that, according to an article in the Washington Post, we are one of the only liberal arts colleges in the nation that beats the current trend by having an increase in enrollment.
Picking classes for your schedule is difficult since there is a limited number of courses offered, and you can get stuck taking a class with a awful professor at an awful time.
My English professor was incredibly intelligent and knowledgeable on his subject, but he had a disgustingly condescending attitude and a rude disregard for my class.
The social scene is very very divided between athletes and non-athletes. About half the student body is on a sports team, and the other half is a bunch of weirdos. It's just depressing.
If you aren't an athlete or feel like you're a Randolph "original," as the slogan goes, then please don't come here.
The college is unheard of and I doubt a degree from here holds much weight. While there are good things happening here, you've really gotta fit into the particular Randolph type of person to expect to enjoy your time here.You probably applied here out of curiosity and they probably gave you a really tempting financial aid deal to lure you in...If you consider yourself a normal and chill person, DON'T TAKE IT. Go to community college for a couple years and then transfer into UVA or George Mason or something. Seriously. You've been warned.
The college does have a long standing history as RMWC, but that is were it stops. It may look the same but it a completely different school now.
How do I mean? During a pre-season ncaa meeting, my first days of first year, the athletic department head told us that they had done a random drug testing an earlier year and the results had been horrible. No repercussions came from this. This is a long running problem with the college.
Why is it such a problem? Plain and simple, there are 600 kids on campus, when 75% or more of the student population drinks or does drugs that only leaves a very small number who don't. I had a friend who transferred from Randolph to U. So. Florida one of the countries top party schools, and Ill never forget her saying. "Florida is fun, but they don't party as hard as Randy-Mac."
An ambulance at the college to rush someone to the hospital is commonplace it seems these days. With the introduction of men into the college the number of incidents involving Rape and assault are also beginning to rise, devastating to individuals in such a small community where you cant drop a dime without the college knowing about it.
The college still has a few redeeming qualities. The colleges "be an original" campaign ultimately failed. The don't want original, they want you to be just like every other college kid, but occasionally they actually do get original people, and they make the college an amazing place.
A handful of the teachers are top-tier, mostly the ones that stayed after the co-ed switch. Degree programs have become much easier with the addition of less than qualified males to the college. Sports is the main entertainment, besides the Macon Activities Council. For a D3 school the importance of the sports programs is a little absurd, esp when most of them are quite awful to be honest.
Randolph college is perfect for Intelligent Girls who can speak their mind and can keep jerks at bay.
It's also perfect for Less than qualified males who want to be treated like a god for participating in a sport.If you actually are an Original, I hope you find the teachers who really will care about your future, and the friends that will love you for you. Try and avoid the drugs and the assholes, keep your head down, and the college will be a great place for you, other than that, just about anywhere else would be better.
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