<p>As for OSU being a "party school," I can attest to quite the opposite.</p>
<p>I live on West Campus (everybody else thinks we're boring, but that's just because we're far enough away from classroom buildings that we don't come back until the evening!). Some people have already had parties, but the suite setup makes it so I am aware they are happening, but it doesn't prevent me from studying for tomorrow's chemistry quiz.</p>
<p>The seriousness of the students really depends on what classes you take and who you hang out with. In regular GEC (core) courses, it will be easy to get a front row seat and be the smartest kid in class. In my honors Chemistry lecture, however, students start lining up outside the door a half hour before class starts, and rush to get in the front of the lecture hall when the doors open. I went to my professor's office hours and found ten other students crammed into his office, sitting on his desk, the floor, anywhere, just to ask questions about the most recent chapter.</p>
<p>My suitemates and I are all non-drinkers, which was lucky, because none of us knew each other before this past week. Already we are comfortable around each other, and almost every night some of us can be seen in the common room, playing Catchphrase or watching a movie or TV, usually with a bunch of guys from our floor. Our RA usually joins us, and she is awesome. So we're not having crazy wild drinking binges, but we still have a lot of fun, and it is hard to tear myself away from a game to go into my room and study. Most of us study during the day, and so far everyone is taking their classes pretty seriously. Keep in mind I am in an honors dorm.</p>
<p>So yes, the honors program, at least, is very focused on academics. The GEC requirements are actually hard (practically every GEC course has to be honors or upper-level), so there's no screwing around if you want to graduate with Honors. I really love my suite, and my classes are quite hard (this was self-imposed; they don't have to be hard if you don't want them to be).</p>
<p>I was an all-A student in high school, too, and I'm pre-med so I hope to get mostly As here. I'm glad I didn't go to one of the prestigious (and much more expensive) schools I was accepted to, because here the students realize there are more important things than beating out all the other people in your class. There are a lot of valedictorians, but they didn't need to go to an Ivy League (or other private LAC) school to feel like they had succeeded. Of course, there are a lot of drunken rowdy people too, but I don't have to deal with them if I don't want to.</p>