Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:General Studies gives a different degree to its graduates from the College.
The College diploma is in Latin, and says Columbia College, signed by the Dean of Columbia College
The GS diploma is in English and says signed by the Dean of the 'Faculty of General Studies'.
Two separate institutions in one university, and two separate degrees. A few classes are mixed to limited extent, but not many. All to the benfit of the college undergaduates.
So Columbia is only made up of two undergraduate schools. The 3,000 at SGS who sit alongside you, study with you, ask questions, etc. are getting degrees from another school not Columbia University. They must be, since their large numbers aren’t represented in in student/faculty ratios (along with graduate students) and admittance rates. All schools take transfer students, but I doubt many have 1/3 of their undergraduates matriculated in such a manner. Certainly not at the elite level .
Anonymous wrote:General Studies gives a different degree to its graduates from the College.
The College diploma is in Latin, and says Columbia College, signed by the Dean of Columbia College
The GS diploma is in English and says signed by the Dean of the 'Faculty of General Studies'.
Two separate institutions in one university, and two separate degrees. A few classes are mixed to limited extent, but not many. All to the benfit of the college undergaduates.
Anonymous wrote:Are you sure 30,000 students are taking classes each term with Harvard College students., SGS students at Columbia are!
Anonymous wrote:ThE GS students have their own faculty and their own classes. I have never heard of a class int he College or SEAS where 'up to 1/3 of the class is GS students.' Complete favbricated nonsense. My classes and all that I saw were 100% College students in the core courses, and in some other courses maybe a few GS students.
Most GS students took their classes with the GS faculty.
False and duplicitous remarks by someone who knows nothing about the stuation. Envy maybe ?