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The Big Book of Colleges 2008
 
 
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The Big Book of Colleges 2008 [Paperback]

Mark Benvenuto (Author), Kelly Carey (Editor), Matt Hamman (Editor)
2.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

July 1, 2007
College guides written by students for students

Your ultimate source for honest, unbiased information, College Prowler delivers an inside look at 249 of the top colleges and universities in the US. Complete with thousands of student quotes, grades, stats, and reviews, this college guide offers a comprehensive collection of college information. See how students rate their campus when it s time to look beyond the brochures and talk about the issues that really matter.

Picking a college is hard, but we're here to help. The lists at the beginning of this book groups 249 schools in a variety of categories. Interested in location, size, or selectivity? Check the lists. Curious about which schools have the best dining, dorms, or local atmosphere? We rank those, too. Cross-compare between the different lists to find the schools that match all of your needs. Dive into our school-specific sections and find out why those colleges you have your eye on scored well in one category and poor in another. Just like the original College Prowler guidebooks, each school's section is student-written and provides its own unique dialogue to help you discover if the college is right for you.


Editorial Reviews

About the Author

College guides for each of the top colleges and universities in the US

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 if any aspect of a particular college is terrible, we (unlike a campus brochure) intend to publish it. 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, layout, and perform accuracy checks on 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 or university receives a collection of letter grades (A through F) that reflect student opinion and help to represent contentment, prominence, or satisfaction for 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!

Product Details

  • Paperback: 1106 pages
  • Publisher: College Prowler (July 1, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1427400016
  • ISBN-13: 978-1427400017
  • Product Dimensions: 9.9 x 8.1 x 2.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 4.6 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 2.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,645,960 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Not as good as some, but best with student opinions, February 28, 2008
By 
This review is from: The Big Book of Colleges 2008 (Paperback)
I know many college experts feel that the best book on the colleges is Fiske, but it is a bit light on student viewpoint. In contrast, College Prowler's Big Book of Colleges is a very good resource of student opinion. (It's similar to the website, CampusDirt.com, but generally more thorough.) However, the college books that rely heavily on student views share the problem of excessive subjectivity. To be fair, College Prowler readily admits that students are not uniform at different schools, and it's not easy for students to compare their experiences with those at other colleges. A student that rated academics at her school a B- might have given it an A if she'd been exposed to the same courses at several other schools, but there's no way for her to know. The students who only rated George Washington University's diversity a C+ have no idea how truly un-diverse a small, rural college can be. Even students who transfer probably couldn't be familiar with more than two or three institutions. Still, for many of the graded categories such as campus dining, safety, parking, and housing, this book is probably accurate in assessing how happy a typical student would be with each school. Since the Big Book of Colleges delivers a wider variety of opinions than some of the guides, you will get some contradictions. At one school, a student said "it's not a great idea to walk around campus at night" while another said "campus security is so good, I feel totally safe going for a run at midnight." You'll frequently have opinions that say "dorms are plush" and "dorms are nasty" for the same school. However, each school's entry has an author who generally does a good job of evaluating the differing opinions and putting them in perspective.

Here's where this book totally falls down: Selectivity. They claim the University of Michigan is "less selective." They claim that Bryn Mawr and Carnegie-Mellon are at the same level of selectivity as Slippery Rock and Tennessee State. No, no, no. They rate selectivity entirely on the percentage of students admitted which means they don't understand the concept of a "self-selecting applicant pool." Sure, some colleges aren't going to get the thousands of "not-a-chance" applications that Harvard, Brown or NYU will receive which means they accept a much larger percentage of applicants, but if you don't have high grades or test scores, you will not get in. The worrisome thing about this is that if this book is a student's only resource, he or she may think a school is a safety when that's not at all true. While it's not perfect, Barron's Profiles of American Colleges has what I feel is the most accurate and thorough analysis of selectivity although in the past they've provided SAT medians as opposed to a range of scores which isn't as helpful. The College Board guide (and website) do a decent job with selectivity and explaining a student's chances as does Princeton Review with its thorough freshman class profiles.

This leads us to College Prowler's shortage of statistics. Honestly, this book discusses each college more thoroughly than Princeton Review or Yale Insider's (although not Fiske), and if you search through each college's entry you will find important information on freshmen retention and graduation rates. However there is some info missing, particularly on financial aid such as average grant size and average amount of need met. (As a matter of fact, The Big Book of Colleges claims it is "filled with financial aid resources." Really? Where? I didn't see them.) The other guides (Princeton Review, Insider's, Fiske) are far better with statistics.

The Big Book of Colleges only lists about 250 schools which isn't really enough. There are many top schools they left out (i.e. University of the South, Worcester Polytechnic, Wofford, Austin College, Knox, Hendrix, Lawrence) that Fiske and Princeton Review did not. On the other hand, this book does have more pages on each school than the others (although partially because, with lots of separated text boxes and headers, it does not use space effectively), and it's already kind of expensive compared to other choices.

College Prowler is a bit quirky. It's probably the only guide that will have a glossary defining both "beer pong" and "mushrooms" as well as "early decision" and "rolling admissions". At times it's a bit more fun than other guides (under Wilkes University it tells you which buildings are haunted), with some emphasis on how hot the guys or girls are, giving it a more authentic feel that this is really written for students. One thing that's a big improvement over Insider's is that they've managed to present (fairly) unbiased portrayals of the universities by students who actually know the schools well. Also, most of these guides are guilty of recycling entries year after year, and since College Prowler is fairly new, chances are that the info is close to current.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Kinda Lame, April 7, 2008
This review is from: The Big Book of Colleges 2008 (Paperback)
So basically I purchased this book for a few reasons:
1. I had asked my mom for a college book to help me figure out what schools I am interested in. She begrudgingly agreed. I picked the U.S. News Ultimate College Guide 2008 thinking that it was massive and therefore would contain all of the information I could ever want.... it didn't.
2. During this whole college selection process I have developed a weird/nerdy/neuorotic obsession with learning everything I can about the subject. I wanted to feed my thirst for knowledge!! I thought that the Big Book of Colleges would give me more information about the social aspects of different schools (plus the student comments sounded totally rad). This time I recieved the book as a gift.

I guess ultimately I was dissapointed by this guide. I was really put off by all of the gross/brutal statements that students made about their classmates looks, actions, attitudes. This book turned me off from the whole idea of college. Ya, I know that there are out of control parties involving beer, drugs, and whatever else but I was hoping that all of this was avoidable if you didn't want to be a part of it. I felt that this book was written under the assumption that all teens are vapid, arrogant, and irresponsible. That definitly isn't the case. I guess that this book could spur curiosity in kids that aren't interested in your typical college book format. Though I wouldn't recommend it I suppose parents could buy it for there teens in an effort to get them involved in the college selection process. Whatever the case I wasn't crazy about this book. It wasn't worth the money.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
freshman retention rate, campus safety, residence life, south quad, university police, flex dollars, student activities center, dining center, dining dollars, downtown orlando, downtown mall, colgate university, toll egeprowler, south campus dorms, actual student, big sports school, varsity sports, most popular faiths, much school spirit, dorm food, three dining halls, campus sucks, football team sucks, gorgeous campus, dining hall food
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Students Speak Out, Asian American, Student-to-Faculty Ratio, Worst Things, Best Things, Did You Know, Four-Year Graduation Rate, Native American, Student Body African American, Popular Faiths, Gay Pride, Economic Status, College Prowler, Public Safety, New York, Notre Dame, Ivy League, San Diego, Overall School Spirit School, Cal Poly, Students Receiving Financial Aid, Warren Wilson, Penn State, Ole Miss, Holy Cross
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