Columbia Student Willing to Help

<p>Is Columbia College easier to get into than SEAS? I want to major in Biomedical Engineering, but if my chances are slim, then I would rather just go with Columbia college and major in chemistry and physics. Plus, I would get a good classical education. I’m also a transfer student if that changes anything… </p>

<p>Hope you can help! Thanks.</p>

<p>Columbia College has around a 6% acceptance rate and SEAS has around 9%. Acceptance rates only give you information of how many people applied and how many were selected. It doesn’t reflect the actual difficulty in being admitted. Don’t apply to SEAS unless you want to be an engineer. I’ve seen too many people who aren’t willing to put in the work required to be an engineer come to SEAS and suffer. The fact that you’re hesitant to apply to SEAS means you shouldn’t.</p>

<p>Hey! I would love some help :slight_smile:

  1. What would you say was your biggest strength in your application? Your biggest weakness?</p>

<p>2) Did any of you send an arts supplement? I want to send my photography but I’m not sure how much it will help. I think that there are some good shots and some standout shots in it but I am unaware of the caliber of the art that is being sent.</p>

<p>Thank you!</p>

<p>Also, my school offers 0 teams, 0 clubs and 0 organizations. it sucks.
I have done my best given the fact that I unlike many people haven’t had opportunities for ECs (nor do I have the time. I have 9.5 hour days).
I want to pursue a ton of activities in college. Will Columbia look at what I want to do rather than what I have done? will they read my application in the context of my situation?</p>

<p>Are the dining services normally closed during school breaks (fall break, thanksgiving, winter break etc)? If yes, where do the students normally take their food if they stay back during those break periods?</p>

<p>Yes, and people usually venture into the neighborhood and buy stuff. (theres tons of stuff, and a lot of it is affordable) There’s a really long post about this on the 2016 Facebook group that I can PM to anyone interested.</p>

<p>I’m undecided as to whether I want to study engineering or economics, so where should I apply?</p>

<p>@howdygeepi – If you are seriously interested in both fields, this may interest you:</p>

<p>[Combined</a> Plan Program Experience | Columbia Undergraduate Admissions](<a href=“http://www.studentaffairs.columbia.edu/admissions/learn/academiclife/engineering/combined-plan-program]Combined”>Combined Plan Applicants | Columbia Undergraduate Admissions)</p>

<p>ok thanks!!!</p>

<p>Hi, I’m interested in the dance program at Barnard and the newspaper at Columbia, but am not sure of which school to apply to. To what degree do students from the colleges mix? What are the main differences in the campus cultures? Thanks so much for the help!</p>

<p>What do you mean by newspaper? If you mean Spec, I believe they (as well as most campus publications) take writers from CC, SEAS, GS, and Barnard, so I wouldn’t worry about that.</p>

<p>Great job! thank you for your help</p>

<p>@neiro6 Can you elaborate on course load and the type of assignments? I spend about 3 hours on homework a night and have been writing analytical papers on everything from Cat on a Hot Tin Roof to Outliers (2010, I’d recommend it to anyone contemplating the meaning of success) since 9th grade; what should I expect?</p>

<p>It depends on what classes you take and what you major in! Given your focus on English papers, I’ll assume you’re planning to be a humanities major. You probably won’t find it that different from your high school workload; if you spent 3 hours reading each night, and wrote analytical papers on the weekend, you’d be fine. </p>

<p>You’ll have a lot more freedom, both in terms of classes (if you don’t like math, you’ll never have to do problem sets which should free up a lot of time) and time management (since you’re only in class for 3 or 4 hours/day, you have lots of free time to do homework—or go out with friends, or do extracurriculars.</p>

<p>For an intro or intermediate lecture, the workload will probably be 2 short (5–6 page) analytical papers, plus a final and maybe a midterm or weekly responses. The reading for each class will probably be around 50 pages/week.</p>

<p>Thanks, that helps a lot. I’m actually thinking about majoring in Biology because I want to go to dental school, and minoring in Art History, but if I could get away with majoring in some humanity and still end up in dental school I would. </p>

<p>Best and worst experiences at CU for you?</p>

<p>Biology is a whole different kettle of fish, then. Your freshman year will probably be dominated by taking one of the three chemistry tracks, most of which involve a lot of work and at least one semester of a lab. (Disclaimer: I am not a bio major, so I can’t speak to the exact workload myself.)</p>

<p>I have been here literally all of three months so I will defer to pwoods on best and worst experiences. I will say that class registration <em>at any school</em> as a freshman is awful, so just be prepared.</p>

<p>I’ll brace myself!</p>

<p>Is it hard to make friends at Columbia as opposed to making friends at a school that’s not in NYC (like Brown for example)? Do you feel like it significantly impacts your college social experience?</p>

<p>I think it’s better to frame the question in terms of asking both students at Columbia and other schools “how did you make your friends?” I’m sure there’s some kids who find it really hard to make friends here, and some who find it easier because of the city. Asking where and how they met their friends will probably give you better answers. That helps you evaluate the social situation on your own terms, rather than someone else’s.</p>

<p>@clssnr: Yeah, bio/pre-med/science will be a very different experience than a humanity track. You won’t have many papers (yay?), but you will have weekly problem sets, required labs, and multiple midterms. Like neiro, I’m not a bio major—I’m an anthro major—so I can’t speak to the exact workload.</p>

<p>@Adam: Columbia’s location in NYC absolutely changes the dynamics of our community. With very few exceptions, we don’t have the kind of campus-wide events that you see at other schools. Columbians also tend to be a lot like New Yorkers—individualist, cosmopolitan, and sophisticated. That also factors into the Columbia community feeling very different from your “typical college” community. It isn’t that difficult to make friends if you join clubs and make an effort to meet people, but you definitely have to meet people. I wouldn’t say Columbia is worse than other schools when it comes to community; it’s just different.</p>