Overview
College guides written by students for students.
Your ultimate source for honest, unbiased information, College Prowler delivers an inside look at the top colleges and universities in the United States. While writing our series of college guides, we felt it was critical that our content was unbiased and unaffiliated with any college or university.
We think it’s important that our readers get honest information and a realistic impression of the student opinions on any college campus—that’s why we intend to publish information about all aspects of a particular college, even the terrible parts you wouldn’t find in a campus brochure. While we do keep an eye out for the occasional extremist—the cheerleader or the cynic—we take pride in letting the college students tell it like it is. We strive to create a college guide that’s as representative as possible of each particular campus. Our guides cover both the good and the bad, and whether the survey responses point to recurring trends or a variation in opinion, these sentiments are directly and proportionally expressed through our guides.
College Prowler guides are in the hands of students throughout the entire process of their creation. Because you can’t make student-written guides without the students, we have students at each college campus who help write, randomly survey their peers, edit, and perform accuracy checks for every college guide that we publish. From the very beginning, student writers gather the most up-to-date stats, facts, and inside information on their colleges. They fill each section with student quotes and summarize the findings in editorial reviews. In addition, each college oruniversity receives a collection of letter grades (A through F) that reflect student opinion and help to represent contentment, prominence, or satisfaction in each of our 20 specific categories. Just as in grade school, the higher the mark the more content, more prominent, or more satisfied the students are with the particular category.
Once a college guide is written, additional college students serve as editors and check for accuracy even more extensively. Our bounce-back team—a group of randomly selected students who have no involvement with the project—are asked to read over the material in order to help ensure that the guide accurately expresses every aspect of the university and its students. This same process is applied to the nearly 300 colleges and universities College Prowler currently covers. Each guide is the result of endless student contributions, hundreds of pages of research and writing, and countless hours of hard work. All of this has led to the creation of a student information network that stretches across the nation to every college that we cover. It’s no easy accomplishment, but it’s the reason that our college guides are such a great resource.
When reading our guides and looking at our college rankings, keep in mind that every college is different and that the students who make up each college are not uniform—as a result, it is important to assess colleges on a case-by-case basis. Because it’s impossible to summarize an entire college with a single number or description, each guide provides a dialogue, not a decision, that’s made up of 20 different topics and hundreds of student quotes. In the end, we hope that this guide will serve as a valuable tool in your college selection process. Enjoy!
Synopsis
College guides written by students for students.
Brigham Young University Students
Tell It Like It Is
A BYU experience is unlike anything else. The things that you will learn go far beyond what is taught in the classrooms, and the people that you will meet are exceptional. Researching the school, and being familiar with the rules and expectations of students, will make the transition smoother and help you get the most out of your BYU experience. Looking at BYU statistically, you realize that what you are getting is a great education at an amazingly low price. But what the statistics can't tell you is the unique and defining experience you will have while attending BYU. Hopefully this book will paint a broader picture of what BYU is and what a BYU student can hope for and expect.
Ashley Vance, Author
Brigham Young University
Things you'll need to know that College Prowler can tell you . . .
On Living Standards:
* Visitors of the opposite sex are only allowed in the living room and kitchen and are not allowed to use the bathroom.
* Visiting hours are 9 a.m. to 12 midnight, or 1:30 a.m. on Fridays.
* Students must abide by the BYU Honor Code.
* Students are expected to follow the dress code.
* Students are responsible for keeping their guests to these guidelines.
On Strictness:
"By signing your name to the Honor Code, you are saying that you will live by strict rules, and BYU will not let you forget it. The Honor Code Office is the biggest threat on campus, and no one wants to be called by them. Students will most definitely be kicked out of school for drug and alcohol offenses, as well as possibly suspendedfor things such as curfew violations and being found in the bedroom of someone of the opposite sex. Again, due to the Mormon culture, things such as cheating and lying are looked down on by peers and not tolerated by authority."
On Guys and Girls:
"The guys at BYU are pretty stellar, with exceptional academic performance, adequate conversation skills, and admirable goals and ambitions. Just be sure to do the ring check. It's very likely that the hot guy in your biology class is married with two kids."
"Seriously, the girls are nicer than I thought they'd be! The skinny, tan, drop dead gorgeous ones are actually nice and humble. I thought that would never happen here!"
Do you have what it takes to be a part of the BYU experience? Find out what level of personal dedication it requires, straight from the students' mouths.
Visiting campus isn't enough.
Read our Brigham Young University insider's guide and discover what it feels like to be on campus for 4 years.
Discover if BYU is Right For You.
The Boston Globe
The prospective college student's antidote to the Princeton Review doldrums.