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| Quite Bright | Most people come here to get a degree and go. ATM, even that's hard, what with the budget cuts (2009-2010). It's a commuter college. Hardly any school spirit. There are some cool people, and the professors are really nice, but they're not paid enough and are often way too busy. | Collaboration/Competitive: A+, Individual Value: F |  | | |
| | Jul 25 2010 | 1st Year Male --
Class 2011 | | Blog it!Blog about this comment from your webpage or Blog, or MySpace account: Just copy and paste!
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| Bright |
The music department at CSUN was a total joke. When I visited the school before I applied, my would-be advisor was so friendly and seemingly so helpful. I found out later that those were recruitment tactics and that the department was terrible. I did not get the main teacher I wanted and who was promised to me by this advisor. This advisor turned out to be verbally abusive to students and quite unhelpful. Very few professors in the music department cared at all. Students were so cliquey and arrogant and the overall environment was toxic. I switched to another CSU school to finish my Bachelor of Music and it was a better experience. Now that I am in grad school at a major conservatory on the east coast, I can look back at CSUN and laugh. If you're an ambitious, dedicated musician, you'll be wasting your time at CSUN. Do yourself a favor and learn from my mistake. Don't give that crap school a minute of your time. | Campus Aesthetics: B+, Faculty Accessibility: F |  | | |
| | Jul 12 2010 | 3rd Year Male --
Class 2000 | | Blog it!Blog about this comment from your webpage or Blog, or MySpace account: Just copy and paste!
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| Bright |
I am a MUSIC STUDENT: PERCUSSION PERFORMANCE Major. For many years growing up, I've always heard of the great percussion program at CSUN -- it seemed to be producing many great players who went on to have very successful careers. The department, for a very long time, had a great reputation.
However, I'd say my experience here as a percussion major has been overall average (Grade = C). Unfortunately, budget cuts have made the administration and departments within the music school make decisions that generate not-so-good quality results. For example, they don't have enough money to pay teachers, so they result to having teachers teach classes that they are not good at teaching (i.e. the choir teacher teaching music history). There have been many complaints from these kinds of classes. So when you are picking classes (no matter what major), go to ratemyprofessor.com -- it helps a lot.
Also, because the percussion department needs money, they tend to accept people into the program that should NOT be in there. The Percussion program is filled with a lot of BA, non performance majors (like Music Industry or Music Education), that can barely play, never practice and never take anything seriously -- all they do is take up space in the practice rooms the week before juries when the people who really DO practice a lot need to practice also. This gets really irritating after awhile.
However, on the up side, the percussion department HAS accepted many great undergrad students who are very talented, work very hard and who are serious. But these people of course, are in smaller numbers.
JURIES - (These are basically "finals" for your lessons -- you prepare very hard pieces and perform them in front of all your percussion teachers and peers and you get a final grade for every semester). For most instrumentalists at CSUN, juries are very, very high-pressure. You cannot miss a note without getting marked down. However, in the percussion department, they are very lax about everything. If you generally practice, and you can play through your pieces without stopping, you'll probably get an A. A lot of people are happy about this, however, to me -- they need to have HIGHER STANDARDS.
LESSONS - You get out of them what you put into them. If you half-ass everything, that's what you'll get out of it. If you practice a lot and work hard, you'll do fine. If you slack, you'll be able to get by (if you're talented) for a little while, but not for long. So work hard. If you want to play something harder than what your teacher is giving, TELL THEM, or you'll be bored out of your mind for 5 weeks.
Anyway, to sum this all up. Here are my complaints:
NEGATIVE:
The percussion department professors/teachers need to have HIGHER STANDARDS when it comes to who gets into the program, ensemble auditions, juries, lessons, people not practicing in percussion ensemble, and more. DO NOT wait for anyone to push you to not be lazy- you need to take care of that yourself. You are on your own- Don't depend on teachers or students to push you to practice and be motivated. Nobody will hold your hand. POSITIVE: The student body in the program has been amazing -- I have made so many friends. We all work together for many, many hours each day, and we're all in the same ensembles, etc. You get close to people FAST. Sometimes of course, that can lead to drama like anything else, but overall it has been so much fun. But don't let that distract you from practicing. Sometimes, however, people talk behind each other's backs and get competitive. But compared to other schools, it's very mild. Socially = amazing | Social Life: A+, Education Quality: C |  | | |
| | Jun 14 2010 | 4th Year Male --
Class 2006 | | Blog it!Blog about this comment from your webpage or Blog, or MySpace account: Just copy and paste!
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| Not so bright | the bad part of the university is that majority of students participate in cheating and academic dishonesty because it seems to be the common culture at csun. on the otherhand the classes at csun are easy enough where cheating is not necessary. | Surrounding City: B+, Collaboration/Competitive: D- |  | | |
| | Mar 23 2010 | 3rd Year Male --
Class 2010 | | Blog it!Blog about this comment from your webpage or Blog, or MySpace account: Just copy and paste!
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