Unless you’ve been living under a rock while reading my blog
posts, I’m sure you all know by now that I’m an engineer, so I basically live
in Rice Hall, or some other building on E-Way, the sidewalk where you can find
all of the engineering buildings. E-Way is beautiful in the spring, and usually
full of food as the Engineering Student Council (affectionately known as
E-Stud) puts on E Week, where there’s basically just free stuff for engineers
everywhere! My personal favorite is the date function on Friday night…called
f(date). Get it?! Function of date? Date function? Hahahaha I sure do love me
some nerd humor.
AOE, the engineering sorority, gave out free Marco and Luca dumplings during E-Week. |
There are plenty of stereotypes about the workload in engineering,
but honestly, it’s the same as it is in any other school: definitely manageable
if you plan your time out. We’re all busy, but professors generally understand that you have more going on in your life than
just their class. That being said, engineers definitely have more hard
assignments due, so like problem sets that are graded for accuracy, as opposed
to soft ones, like reading, than most of the other schools here. BUT I have
written a grand total of 6 pages of papers (of words, papers of diagrams don’t’
count) in my two years at UVA. And that is certainly a plus for me! There’s
only one stereotype about the E-school that I’ve found pretty accurate: the
lack of girls…I’m usually one of only a few girls in my classes, but you can
certainly find them if you go looking: rushing AOE was one of the best
decisions I’ve ever made.
The Nursing school tends to have the opposite stereotypes:
girls wandering everywhere doing no work, but that is absolutely not true.
Again, like the E-School, the gender stereotype has some truth to it (Nursing
and the E-School tend to have mixers once a year to help even out the ratios),
but those girls have to deal with more odd hours than anyone I know…some of
them have classes or shifts at the hospital at like 6:30 AM?! I certainly
couldn’t do it. Plus, the Nursing school classes are a lot closer and more
personal classes in many of the other schools, since the school itself is so
much smaller.
And last but not least, we have the
ever-so-far-away-from-dorms Architecture School, known only as the A-school!
A-school kids like to spend a lot of time in the studio working on their hands
on projects, and a lot of time on the bus going back and forth from dorms to
the A-School (about a mile away from grounds, near Lambeth Field upperclass
dorms and the Drama buildings). It’s a really exclusive group of people though:
the entire school is only about 300 people. So for all you potential future
A-Schoolers, expect to spend a lot of time away from your dorm room around
deadlines. Your essays aren’t actually essays, they’re pieces of art, but don’t
think for a second that makes it any easier.
Specialized schools at UVA all have their perks, but they
all have their downsides as well. You’re at UVA, and we’re the number 1 public
school in the nation for a reason…wherever you are, you’ll end up working hard,
but you’ll have a great time doing it. Club Clem, anyone?
No comments:
Post a Comment