Indiana University student culture

Anonymous
Does anyone have kids who go to IU? We just visited and loved the beautiful campus and would love some feedback on student life. Do kids regularly attend sporting events? Are there fun things to do for under 21 kids who don’t join Greek life? Is coursework challenging, and are academics a priority for most students?
Anonymous
The answer is yes to all those questions. There are serious kids and party kids. There are a lot of kids who don't go Greek. While a lot of students will go to sporting events, some will never go to sporting events.

My neighbors are IU alumni and they still will occasionally travel for a IU sporting event with old friends. Their oldest is at IU (Kelley).

There is something there for everyone.
Anonymous
Can kids get into bars under 21? Someone said it's impossible.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Can kids get into bars under 21? Someone said it's impossible.


Fake IDs.
Anonymous
Missing female students.


Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Can kids get into bars under 21? Someone said it's impossible.


No, it's not impossible.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Missing female students.


???
Anonymous
IU alum here: it's really an immersive place. Because there are so many opportunities and interesting activities going on, you can really find your "thing" and get seriously involved in it. I was part of student government, co-led a really serious study group in my major, had season basketball tix, was involved in my scholarship program, had individual tutorials with more than one professor, made friends with all different kinds of people, studied abroad three times (short-term and longer), met my future spouse, and won full fellowships to grad school. All in all, not a bad four years! Like all large schools, IU is what you make it. But you can make it into pretty much anything.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:IU alum here: it's really an immersive place. Because there are so many opportunities and interesting activities going on, you can really find your "thing" and get seriously involved in it. I was part of student government, co-led a really serious study group in my major, had season basketball tix, was involved in my scholarship program, had individual tutorials with more than one professor, made friends with all different kinds of people, studied abroad three times (short-term and longer), met my future spouse, and won full fellowships to grad school. All in all, not a bad four years! Like all large schools, IU is what you make it. But you can make it into pretty much anything.


+1.
Anonymous
White bread.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone have kids who go to IU? We just visited and loved the beautiful campus and would love some feedback on student life. Do kids regularly attend sporting events? Are there fun things to do for under 21 kids who don’t join Greek life? Is coursework challenging, and are academics a priority for most students?


OP, did you go to the Kelley DA day? If so, how was it?
Anonymous
DD is junior there. From OOS, into progressive politics and sustainability, not into Greek life (and before choosing IU she checked with some recent alums to confirm Greeks orgs aren't the dominant force of social life there -- and they haven't been). She liked the campus, liked the programs in her fields, liked the range of options. She's having a fantastic time. It's a huge school and it seems like to offset that they have a lot of smaller-sized groups and clubs as an initial way to meet people. She opted to live in a "living/learning" dorm that focuses on sustainability and that's provided many of her closest friends (but she's made friends outside that too -- in the Kelley business school, in some sororities and fraternities, etc). She also joined a few clubs freshman year - isn't as active in them now but again it was a good way to meet people. Bloomington is wonderful and offers a lot of dining and entertainment options; the performing arts programs bring a lot of inexpensive events to campus; Big Ten sports are not really a primary focus for her but she likes the energy it brings to the campus and she and friends attends a couple of times a semester. She and friends get up to Indianapolis for concerts from time to time, and have road-tripped to places like Chicago and Cincinnati and Nashville. Her friends are serious students (okay, one exception) and she is too -- actually, she's probably more serious about her studies than she ever was before. Over five semesters she's has had one meh professor and has liked or loved all the others. She studied in Europe last semester - not in a generic "Americans abroad" drinking and sightseeing program but in an honors exchange program IU has with a leading European uni (which I mention only to underscore that IU has some great programs that smaller schools won't).

Any surprises? Her best friends are from Indiana and they are smart and hardworking and well-travelled (because we didn't know what to expect). The IU campus and Bloomington absolutely seem like a typical university town (or small city) bubble consumed by the usual student passions and insulated from a lot of state- and national-level politics (because she wasn't sure if going to school in a pretty red state would feel different from the blue states she's more familiar with). IU doesn't feel isolated (Bloomington is an hour from Indianapolis, which isn't NY but is a real city). 'Midwest nice' is actually a thing, not just hype -- with the kids, with the administration, with the people in town.

We really hadn't known what to expect - had no prior connection with the school except some grown family friends whose eyes would tear up whenever they talked about their time in Bloomington. But she liked the programs and loved the campus when she visited, and that IU seems to look for reasons to accept rather than reject applicants. It's vastly surpassed her expectations (and ours to the extent that matters). I obviously can't categorically promise every student will have a great time and find their niche there, but it seems to offer as good a shot at that as anywhere, and DD's experience (since she's definitely not a sorority/business school 'type' of IU cliches) tends to confirm that. Hope this helps.
Anonymous
Thank you for sharing, PP. My senior (direct admit to Kelley and honors) is seriously considering IU even though we have zero connection to Indiana. Did your IU student return to the DMV for summer breaks?
Anonymous
Basketball is huge at IU and games are really fun. People go even when the team is doing badly. It’s a lot like football at Michigan, Notre Dame or Ohio State.

That said, kids who don’t like sports will do just fine as well. At a school of 30,000+ there truly is something for everyone.
Anonymous
Following. Does anyone know how campus life compares to Virginia Tech?
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