Academics
Located in Cleveland, Ohio, Case Western Reserve University is mid-sized school that boasts “fantastic research opportunities,” “an awesome environment,” and “amazing financial aid.” CWRU is “known as an outstanding engineering school” and “companies in the engineering field are aware of CWRU’s excellence and rigor and are very eager to hire CWRU grads.” “Our academics and academic reputation is phenomenal,” one happy student boasts. The “well qualified and passionate” professors are “very involved in their fields” and “usually accessible and reasonable about their workload.” “They all have connections within the research community or the private work sector.” “Supplementary Instructors (past students who passed with an A) are also a great resource and host a variety of study sessions every week to go over material,” one student brags. “We even get free tutoring (up to five hours a week). [The] academic load can be challenging, but if you take advantage of all the available resources around, it’s definitely manageable!” “It is possible to do well in class and be involved in clubs and sports.” If there’s an area that academics could improve, it’s the liberal arts, as students in these majors report feeling their departments are sometimes overlooked. “Administration and advising could still use some work,” one student says. “It is not always clear what path you should be taking in order to graduate, but if you ask enough people, you can figure it out.” Overall, CWRU “is very good at producing students prepared to excel in their career, especially within engineering, medicine, and business.” An initiative to address students’ concerns about advising is currently underway. The university “offers great scholarships and has fantastic research opportunities.” A finance major reports she decided to attend because “it was affordable, prestigious, in an awesome environment, and the people here were all so genuine when I came to visit.” All in all, students really feel that CWRU is a university on the rise. As a cognitive science and psychology student puts it, “If universities were stocks, I’d put all my money into Case Western.”