Indiana University of Pennsylvania-Main Campus Top Questions

What are the academics like at Indiana University of Pennsylvania-Main Campus?

Emily

The criminology department is wonderful.

Rachel

Make yourself known and all your professors will know you by name, You will not feel like a number here. I love all my classes because I picked a major that I love. Students here seem to study a lot but it really depends on the student. Like every college there is the dropouts and the honors students. We have a mix of everything but most students try! In class participation is common depending on the class, lecture or more hands on. The education here from what I have experienced is very hands on and I feel like I learn a lot from the teaching style of my teachers. I am a Fashion and Marketing double major and both departments have been excellent. We have foreign teachers in the fashion department which I enjoy because it gives you a different perspective on how fashion is throughout the world.

Brie

I am an education major and I have had very positive experiences with my professors. Every single one of my teachers has learned my name and I have yet to have a professor who hasn't gone out of his or her way to help his students. For all of you future education majors, know this: Communication is key! You HAVE TO talk to your adviser and your professors. The steps to becoming a teacher can be a nightmare, but having a close relationship with your teachers makes life way easier. I find this would be true with any major. The great thing about the Early Childhood/Special Ed major is that we are separated into cohorts. You will take all of your ed classes with pretty much the same people. We all rotate to classes together. Although this sounds like it could get boring, it's actually really great. We have all grown extremely close over the years and we have created a network of resources. We share ideas, articles, research, and thoughts with each other, recommend teachers, get together for projects, and create clubs together. We have become a very tight knit group. Each class has a different climate depending on the students. Some classes have little discussion and few students participate, but that same teacher may have a class an hour later where they fall behind due to the amount of discussion that takes place. It is up to the students to get the most out of every class. The same is true about studying. I know people who spend most of their time in the library and I know others who are perfectly fine with staying up until 4am the night before. I personally don't recommend either of these approaches, but it's more a matter of preference than anything else.

Carol

Yes, the instructors make an effort to know each of us individually but it helps to make yourself known by participating in class and visiting at least one time during office hours. Class size ranges from 100 like in my history class this semester to 8 in an english class I took over the summer.

Jesse

The IUP academic life is very competitive and the teachers do their best for the most part to benefit you and your education. They seem to really care about their students and are always ready to help you out.

Allie

It's not easy. An IUP degree is comparable to one of a very high end college. So many IUP grads have gone on to various Ivy League Graduate programs, and really made a name for themselves.. Anyone know who invented YouTube? Yeah, IUP Grad.

Mark

Class sizes are small enough that most professors will learn your name. Most professors will remember you if you visit their offices repeatedly. IUP is best known for its music, education, and business programs. However, I cannot complain about my education in mathematics and physics so far. I believe that I have learned a lot in my first year. An IUP education is geared toward getting a job or into graduate school afterwards. Applying for admission here requires you to select a major, or else your application may be delayed. This is good for forcing you to select a major and get you on track to getting a degree starting your freshman year. However, this is not good for those who are undecided. My big complaint is the large liberal studies course load requirement. I have to take an awful many courses that are unrelated to my major, and greatly plug up my schedule for the four years of my education.

Andy

IUP HAS A WIDE RANGE OF EXCITING COURSES TO CHOSE FROM, AND YOU WILL BE GUARANTEED OF HAVINH ONE FACULTY MEMBER..YOUR ADVISOR WHO WILL AMAZINGLY DIRECT YOU IN THE RIGHT PATH, ASSIST YOU WITH THE PERFECT COMBINATION OF CLASSES TO TAKE SO AS TO ENSURE A STABLE HIGH GPA!

KJ

The professors are very nice. They seem as though as they care alot and I look forward to having a successful semester with them.

Jennifer

The classes are pretty small compared to other schools. the lecture classes tend to be larger but they're usually about 120 people max. My smallest class was about 15 people and that was a studio class but i loved it. The professors always have office hours and are usually avalible to talk to whether it be in person, the phone, or email.

Adam

class sucks lets face it there is never anything good to say about them but with all the new buildings going up they are much more talerable to go to now and as in every university you will run into good and bad professors but i have no complaints on the good ones iv had and the bad ones i just get changed

Jenna

Studying is a big part of being a student at IUP but isnt it that way with any college? If you want to get good grades you have to put in extra time.

Crystal

It has been my experience that the classes typically have about 25 students. Biology and other pre-requisite courses have had classes with about 100, but other than 2 classes during my IUP career there have always been 25 students or less. The professors are the best. They have always known the names of everyone in my classes and can even recognize you years later out around town. This may or may not be a good thing. My favorite class I received through IUP was taken at St. Edmund hall, in Oxford, England. There is a wonderful abroad program offered by the school and it is my recommendation that incoming freshman should look into them. I took one class abroad, Shakespeare, which lasted 1 month. I found this the perfect amount of time due to it being my first experience overseas. My professor was an IUP professor who I had in a previous class on campus. It was her suggestion that I partake on the adventure, and I will forever be grateful.

Meghan

It's hard for me to give a good opinion on the academics at IUP because I am a music major...Cogswell Hall is literally my home. I usually see my professors for more than just one class, so it's not uncommon for them to know you're name. Music students are always studying - usually in the form of practicing. Class participation is pretty common. Competition is a little less common, but it depends on what instrument you're studying. As a percussionist, we all learn just as much from each other as we do from our professors, so there really is no competitive atmosphere among us. The only thing I don't like about my major is that they have it all set up to finish in four years, but it is nearly impossible to do. The degree is a five year degree, hands down.

Samantha

Most of my professor know my name depending upon the size of the class. My favorite classes at IUP are usually the ones where the professors are very enthusiastic about the subject they are teaching and allow for in class discussions. I usually consume the most from those types of classes. My least favorite classes usually have the mandatory attendance policies and have professors that don't care about what they are teaching, just assign busy work during the class, or they have no idea what they are talking about. Study wise, I would say when I was a freshmen I hardly needed to study. However, as a sophomore and junior I found myself studying about 2-5 hours depending upon the subject. There is definitely students outside of class having intellectual conversations. I, myself is one them. I always love to meet up with friends for coffee at starbucks or the commonplace for intellectual conversations. Also, students at IUP are very competitive academically. Especially when you get into the upper level classes, you see a lot of competition. The most unique classes I have taken was a history of the renaissance and the reformation, a comparative politics class on western countries, and American Foreign policy. I'm a double major, Spanish and International Relations. I use to have a french minor but it conflicted with my spanish major. I love my international relations major, the professors, and the classes. However, I have grown to hate my spanish major, because of the majority of the professors that teach in that dept. I am only sticking with the program to become fluent in the language. Other than that, I don't care for the program anymore. Some of my professors, I do meet up with during office hours just to have intellectual conversations with. I do not mind IUP's over academic requirments but I do hate the spanish dept's. requirements. That is because it is all based on Spain and their Spain study abroad program that is only offered in the Spring. I think the education at IUP is geared towards getting job, learning, and taking knowledge from the classroom and being able to apply it to your own life which I find very beneficial.

Rachel

Some people complain about the Liberal Studies requirements because they don't see how those requirements relate to their major or to their future career. My response is that not everything you take necessarily needs to tie in with your professional life. After all, you won't be going to work 24 hours per day (Let's hope!). If you become curious about a certain subject but never take a course in it, you might wonder after you graduate whether or not you would have liked it and/or succeeded in it. IUP's professors truly take an interest in their students. They ask about their social lives and about their future plans in a friendly way. The professors let students know that the content they will learn in their classes will be useful no matter what their career goals are.

Jesse

The academics at IUP are pretty challenging. You do have your occasional blow-off class/professor, but mostly you really have to study hard and attend class regularly to get good grades. Most professors i have had are very good, but i have also had a few awful ones. but the good outweighs the bad. Class sizes are dependant on if it is a class for your major or a class that everyone has to take. but most classes you will have will be small around 30 or 40. It seems that it is difficult to graduate in four years because of the requirements, but no one seems to mind because no one really wants to leave.

Casey

Professors, gotta love 'em. Mr Rogers, my radio production professor. The most eccentric professor i had during my stay at IUP. Great teacher, and a great motivated, easy to talk to whilst having a laugh. Another one, i forget hes name now. Looked a bit like the Doc off of Back To The Future, with a mild New York accent, also eccentric. I loved their personalities, very captivating, which is always made learning fun! I personally found IUP academics veryyyy easy and had no trouble in succeeding well in my grades. It is very linear, and set out in what you need to achieve with enough to time to aquire this. I do feel buying text books can be unessercery. In one case i achieved an A without even picking up a textbook which cost about 40 dollars!

Tate

The classes are smaller so most teachers get to know you and your name. It's nice to know your teachers and have them know you too. I am a journalism major and I love it. The professors are so nice and helpful and I've really learned a lot so far. The teachers are always willing to help in any way that they can. They really care about the students and you as an individual. That's something that you definitely don't get in a big school. The one thing I absolutely hate is the liberal studies requirements. That is required in a lot of colleges though. I think it is pointless and a waste of money. I should be able to take my journalism classes and be done with it, not have to have all of these other classes that I will never need.

Robin

My major, Sport Administration, is the best major at IUP. It has to deal with the business side of the sporting life. Which is the perfect choice for me, because I was an athlete in high school and I am a big sports advocate. It is part of the Health and Physical Education department so I get to take classes that have to do with our bodies also. And if I was a little bit smarter then I'd want to be a doctor and be a heart surgeon, so learning about how the body functions is a real treat for me. But the Sport Administration major is also and large male dominant major, very few females are in that department, so I feel that I am breaking the mold of the norm that is the sporting life and trying something that maybe someone else wanted to, but was too scared to do it.