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The University of Alabama - Tuscaloosa

Culverhouse College of Commerce and Business Administration
Contact Information:
Box 870132
Tuscaloosa, AL 35487-0132
Phone: (205) 348-5666
Fax: (205) 348-9046
View Website
The University of Alabama - Tuscaloosa
Statistics
Enrollment: 22341
Average SAT: 555
Average ACT: 24
Most Popular Majors: Elementary Education and Teaching,Finance, General,Nursing/Registered Nurse (RN, ASN, BSN, MSN),
Student Faculty Ratio: 20:1

Scholarships & Financial Aid
Average Freshman Total Need-Based Gift Aid: $4,119.00

Rankings & Lists
2009 Best Value Colleges – Public
Major Frat and Sorority Scene
Most Conservative Students
Students Pack the Stadiums

Students Say - Academics
The University of Alabama is a ridiculously affordable, "technologically advanced," "student-centered" institution that enjoys an outrageous degree of alumni support. "Course offerings are pretty diverse," and there are "tons of majors." Highlights include a "great" engineering college and three honors programs. Other standout programs include business, communication studies, and nursing. Some students say that the "bold and visionary" top brass runs the school "fairly well." Others gripe that the administration is "very bogged down in red tape." "Working with the administration is really terrible sometimes," undergrads say. Professors here are "top researchers or writers in their fields," and some are "very enthusiastic about having undergraduate students helping them with research." The faculty as a whole is also "approachable" and "generally very easy to get in touch with for outside assistance." Teaching ability is "hit-or-miss," though. While there are many professors who are "very animated and interesting to listen to," "others do not have the same talent." "Being a great researcher does not necessarily make a person a good teacher," notes one student.

Students Say - Campus Life
An atmosphere of almost antebellum charm permeates this "pretty" campus. "On sunny days in the fall and spring, students enjoy studying and playing on the quad." Recreational facilities are "excellent." "Life during football season revolves around football." So does morale. Win or lose, though, UA boasts "one of the best college football atmospheres in the country. On Saturdays when the Crimson Tide plays at home, the campus is "a sea of tents for tailgating," "and Alabama fans are singing the fight song." Otherwise, "the Greek organizations rule this campus." They wield "an inordinate amount of power" in student government as well. Whether you pledge or not, though, students promise "an outstanding social atmosphere." "While not everyone participates in the party scene on campus, it is very popular." In addition to the house parties and the festivities at the frat houses, "people enjoying going to the bars on the strip." "Comfort" abounds in surrounding Tuscaloosa, and it is "definitely a college town." People are "very open and courteous" to the students, and virtually everything you need is within "walking distance." When students at UA hanker for more urban environs, "Birmingham is only an hour away, and there is plenty to do there."

Students Say - Student Body
Students here are "extremely friendly" and "usually well dressed and well mannered." "People tend to be a bit conservative," and "a lot are religious." "The typical student is active in a few organizations, makes decent grades, and finds time to relax, too." African American students are the largest minority group. They represent more than ten percent of the student body. Some students maintain that UA is "not diverse socially, ideologically, and culturally." "The different ethnic groups stick together," they say. They look around campus and see "frat boys or sorority girls for the most part"-"same hair, same sunglasses with a string on the back, and stupid visors." Other students vigorously disagree. "We truly aren't a university filled with cookie-cutter people," asserts one student. "There are many diverse groups of students who all have their own roles on campus." "It is easy for someone to come from up north and say this campus is full of close-minded southern Baptist Republicans, just like it is easy for someone to come from a small town…and think this campus is full of liberal heathens," points out another student. "Few people are really atypical, because no matter where you fall in any category, there are people around you who you can connect with."

Other School To Consider
Auburn University
University of Alabama at Birmingham

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