Gallatin School (NYU)

I recently attended an information session at NYU’s Gallatin School and spoke with the admissions office about the latest trends in admissions. Here are some takeaways:

· At Gallatin, students design their own major (called a “concentration”), which typically hovers around three different academic fields of interest. Distribution requirements are minimal. The focus is on thinking deeply and critically about one’s fields of study.

· Gallatin’s program is inherently interdisciplinary: students combine methods and topics from their various fields of study when approaching problems and designing academic projects.

· Gallatin students take Gallatin-only classes, capped at 22 students (but often having only 8-10), as well as classes across NYU. Most students take about half their courses at Gallatin and half elsewhere in NYU.

· In addition to Gallatin’s interdisciplinary seminars and advanced writing courses, students can take numerous arts workshops.

· Students can partake in both Gallatin-specific and NYU-wide clubs. The Gallatin School has its own performing arts theater and campus spaces.

· Gallatin’s admit rate is close to the university’s overall 12.2% acceptance rate, and the grades and test scores of its students are roughly similar to those of students in the other undergraduate programs.

NYU Visit

I recently visited NYU in Manhattan, where I toured the campus and spoke with the admissions office about the latest trends in admissions. Here are some takeaways from my visit:

· NYU has around 25,000 undergrads. Admit rates, which average 12.2% overall, are roughly comparable across undergraduate programs, although slightly lower at Arts & Sciences, Tisch and Tandon. The median SAT score is 1550 and median ACT is 35.

· NYU is globally-focused and has two degree-granting campuses in Shanghai and Abu Dhabi, plus 12 academic educational centers around the world where students can study. Financial aid and credits travel with students across the various campuses and educational centers. Some programs allow students to study abroad as early as their first year.

· First-year seminars often touch on the culture of NYC and turn the city into the students’ classroom.

· Housing is guaranteed all four years and underclassmen typically live on campus, but upperclassmen usually move off campus.

· At the Leslie Entrepreneurship Lab, students can utilize counselors, workshops and a production lab to explore and launch business ideas. Leslie also hosts a “shark tank” where students can pitch their project and compete for funding.

· NYU has dedicated $500,000 to funding undergraduate unpaid internship opportunities.

Inside Bobst, NYU’s main library.

Macaulay Honors College (CUNY)

I recently attended an information session at Macaulay Honors College (CUNY) and spoke with the admissions office about the latest trends in admissions. Here are some takeaways:

· The admit rate at Macaulay is around 5%. Students must select one of the CUNY colleges to attend as a Macaulay student. Each college has a Macaulay honors lounge, students are guaranteed housing for a few years on some campuses, and there is also a Macaulay building on the Upper West Side where many club meets and some Macaulay courses take place.

· In addition to the coursework required at their home college (students receive priority registration), Macaulay students takes four liberals arts seminars, each capped at 20 students, over their first two years. Each course focuses on a different discipline but takes New York City as its object of study and classroom.

· In addition to merit scholarships that cover all tuition, Macaulay provides additional funding for student research, internships and study abroad.

· Macaulay students receive their own special advising, wellness and career counseling services. Macaulay advisors are typically much more responsive than the home-college advisor.

· Admissions recommends submitting a one-page resume with your application.

Hunter College

I recently visited Hunter College in Manhattan, where I toured the campus and spoke with the admissions office about the latest trends in admissions. Here are some takeaways from my visit:

· Admissions are rolling, meaning the earlier you apply the better (ideally, apply in September or the first half of October).

· Located on Manhattan’s Upper East Side, Hunter offers an urban education with a commuter-school feel. Nearly 95% of students live off-campus, and of those who live in campus housing, a majority live in a dorm located about 40 blocks south of the main campus. Priority for housing goes to students not from NYC. There are, however, over 100 student-run clubs and organizations and various small eateries around campus (despite there being no large dining hall).

· Hunter has its own honors program (Honors Scholars Program — different than the CUNY-wide Macaulay Honors College) that includes two years of guaranteed housing and priority course registration. It offers around two honors classes, which incorporate experiential learning in New York City. Macaulay Honors College students can also choose Hunter as their campus (they will receive a degree jointly conferred by Hunter and Macaulay when they graduate).

· While some buildings are in need of renovation, the Cooperman Library recently underwent a multimillion-dollar renovation.

· Hunter is the only college in the city with an entire building–Baker Hall–dedicated to just theater and the performing arts.

· Hunter offers both short (4-6 weeks) and long-term study abroad programs, including the Chinese Flagship Program where you major or minor in Chinese and spend three years at Hunter and one year in China or Taiwan.

· There are various teaching hospitals not far from campus where pre-med students can intern.

Fordham University Visit

This week I visited Fordham University in the Bronx, where I toured the campus and spoke with the admissions office. Here are some takeaways from my visit:

· Students in most majors can study either on the Bronx or Manhattan campus.

· Fordham offers a 6-year BA-JD, a 5-year BA-MBA, as well as a 3-2 engineering program with Columbia and Case Western.

· Advanced music students can take music classes at Julliard’s evening division, and Fordham offers a BFA for dancers in tandem with The Ailey School.

· Premeds attend a first-year course that features guest talks from medical school admission officers, and students can complete medical research through partnerships with the Albert Einstein College of Medicine and Montefiore Health System.

· Students complete internships with 3500 partner organizations.

· As a Jesuit campus, Fordham has a social justice and public service focus. Their local, national and global social justice programs include nonprofit internships, volunteer positions, classes and community engagement projects. Students complete over one million service hours every year.

University Church, which presides over the gothic Queen’s Court residential college: a tight knit
community of 150 students interested in the humanities living and learning together.