Universidad de la Sabana vs University of Copenhagen - KU vs Universidad de Puerto Rico - UPR vs Malmö University - MAU vs Fleming College
Side-by-side comparison from 175 verified student reviews. Scan one row at a time — winners are highlighted
- +Excellent academic quality and comprehensive programs
- +Beautiful campus and enriching environment
- +Humanistic approach and personal development focus
- +Expert, passionate instructors & supportive staff
- +Engaging, well-balanced curriculum with practical application
- +Ideal city location for opportunities & vibrant community
- +Diverse, high-quality academic programs and career opportunities
- +Supportive faculty and a strong sense of community and personal growth
- +Open, inclusive, and professional campus environment
- +Supportive and approachable professors
- +Relevant and forward-thinking curriculum
- +Diverse and inclusive learning environment
- +Relevant curriculum and practical skills development
- +Supportive and knowledgeable instructors
- +Flexible learning options and engaging campus events
- +High-quality, practical business education
- +Transformative personal and leadership development
- +Strong focus on diversity and community impact
- +Supportive and knowledgeable professors
- +Well-prepared teaching staff and continuous training
- +Excellent facilities and positive environment
- -Administrative and management issues cause confusion and frustration.
- -Outdated facilities and technology hinder learning.
- -The curriculum is perceived as irrelevant or poorly structured.
- -Administrative and management issues, including unfair appeal procedures and corner-cutting.
- -Outdated facilities and a lack of modern resources.
- -Poor job prospects and an academic system that doesn't reward hard work.
- -Administrative and management issues cause frequent frustration.
- -Outdated facilities and lack of resources hinder learning.
- -Ineffective teaching and poor curriculum structure lead to dissatisfaction.
- -Administrative and management issues
- -Outdated facilities and resources
- -Misaligned curriculum and teaching methods
- -Outdated facilities and obsolete curriculum are significant concerns.
- -Incompetent instructors and a lack of industry-relevant knowledge acquisition are major drawbacks.
- -The college's reputation and value in the job market have significantly declined.
- -Administrative and management issues cause frequent problems.
- -Outdated facilities and resources hinder learning.
- -Lack of student support and engagement is a recurring concern.
- -Administrative & management issues cause frustration and inefficiency.
- -Outdated facilities and poor maintenance detract from the learning environment.
- -Lack of clear communication and support from staff is a recurring problem.
With a diverse set of ratings, this institution excels in its academic offerings, evidenced by an outstanding score for Professors. Student Life and Accommodations also receive very high marks. While Facilities are rated positively, they represent the lowest score among the surveyed areas. The university demonstrates solid performance across Location, Internationality, and Value.
This university garners high marks across most evaluated aspects. **Professors** and **Internationality** stand out with the strongest scores, indicating excellent faculty and a globally connected environment. **Accomodation** and **Student Life** received the lowest ratings, suggesting areas where improvements could be beneficial. Overall, the university presents a solid offering with particularly positive feedback regarding its academic and international dimensions.
This academic institution garners praise across multiple facets, with exceptional marks for **location** (4.88) and **professors** (4.56). Student life and overall value also receive strong scores around 4.44. The weakest area identified is **facilities**, rated at 3.5. Other positive aspects include accommodations and internationality, both scoring above 4.2.
Analyzing the university's performance reveals a mixed but generally positive picture. The institution excels in its **Internationality** (3.95) and **Professors** (4), indicating strong global engagement and a well-regarded academic staff. Conversely, **Accomodation** (3.23) presents the lowest score, suggesting room for improvement in this area. Other aspects like Facilities, Location, Student Life, and Value fall within a moderate range.
This institution garners excellent marks for its international environment, standing out with a high rating for Internationality. The university also scores well in Location and Value. Conversely, Accomodation is its lowest-rated aspect. Facilities and Professors receive similar, moderate scores, while Student Life falls slightly below average.
This institution garners exceptionally high marks across most aspects. Professors are rated a perfect 5, indicating outstanding instruction. Facilities, location, accommodation, internationality, and value are all rated a near-perfect 4.8. Student life, while still strong at 4.6, is the lowest-scoring category. Overall, the university presents a very positive and well-rounded profile, with instruction being a clear standout.
This institution demonstrates exceptional strengths in several key areas, with perfect scores awarded for its professors, location, and student life. Internationality also receives a positive rating. Areas for potential improvement include facilities and accommodation, which are rated moderately well. Overall, the university offers strong value and excels in its academic and social offerings.
With 11 reviews and an average of 4.64/5 stars, ~100% of feedback is positive. Students highlight the excellent academic quality, beautiful campus, and humanistic approach. There is no negative feedback.
With an average rating of 4.12/5 from 115 reviews, ~99% are positive. Students praise helpful advisors, passionate instructors, and the school's location. A small fraction experienced issues with MA degrees.
All 11 reviews are positive, with an average rating of 4.55/5. Students highlight excellent faculty, diverse programs, and a supportive environment for personal and professional growth. No negative feedback was reported.
Most students (~74%) praise Malmö University's forward-thinking environment, modern facilities, and supportive professors. A small percentage (~9.5%) report issues with resources like printers and overpriced course materials.
The college receives strong positive feedback (~74%) for its well-structured curriculum, relevant skills development, and dedicated staff. Some criticism (~18%) points to program quality and instructor consistency.
Students praise HBS for a prestigious, engaging, and transformative learning experience. Recurring themes include high-quality case-study methods, excellent faculty, and leadership development. Financial aid and community impact are also positively noted. No negative feedback was provided.
With an average rating of 4.5/5 from 2 reviews, the university garners overwhelmingly positive feedback. Students highlight supportive and knowledgeable professors, along with excellent facilities and a positive environment. No negative feedback was provided.
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Don't waste your money on this university's MA degrees. MA degrees are quite useless for job-hunting in Denmark as well, and it doesn't help that this university's — or perhaps it's the country in general — the academic system is built to (a) subject your grades to randomness, i.e. hard work and logical argumentation don't guarantee getting good grades; (b) protect errant university staff over students, with the appeal procedure being an utter sham; (c) cut ever more corners, with MA students having no thesis defence; and (d) treat non-EU students as cash cows to subsidise the university's rent, plus probably a myriad of other costs. What follows is a somewhat high-level elaboration of the above points. a. If you are used to the Anglo-American style of university, which is basically most of the Westernised world in this era, you would be surprised to learn that the Danish grading system — as implemented by this university — allows for multiple unpredictable variables that can unjustly lower your grades beyond belief. For example, there is always an external examiner involved in grading (together with the course instructor in question), but the Danish Examination Order grants the external examiner more power than the course instructor; this means that someone who wasn't following the process of the assignment/exam closely has more influence over the final grade than the course instructor. The official justification for this arrangement is that the grading would be fairer, but in my experience, it does the opposite: the grading is inherently unfairer this way. Even in academia, a piece of writing has to be targeted at the person who will be reading it; and because you don't usually know the identity of the external examiner until much later (e.g. 2–4 weeks before submission), it is difficult to prepare your assignment or exam in a way that would align with the preferences of the course instructor AND the external examiner. For non-EU citizens who mostly live and die by their grades (if the goal is to successfully enter huge international companies after higher education), this unfair grading system can really screw up your job prospects and livelihood in Denmark because you don't benefit from the Danish welfare state as much as the EU/EEA citizens do. European students (especially the Nordic ones) can afford to treat grades as "just numbers/letters on a piece of paper" because even if they get bad grades on their transcripts and have difficulty finding proper full-time jobs, they know that the Danish welfare state would financially support them. b. In relation to point (a), perhaps the most unpredictable variable in assignment/exam grading at this university is the quality of the graders themselves. As a native English speaker from Asia, I had to take an English proficiency test to apply for my MA degree programme — and I scored almost full marks for that test. However, some of the Danish instructors and examiners I have gotten during my studies here seem to be people who cannot argue (or even spell) properly in English... and they can get away with it. It's the typical Western mentality that someone from the West must be better in English than someone from Asia. Anyway, I went through the appeal procedure multiple times for some unfair grades that I received, with one particular appeal involving a course instructor who would very likely score lousily on an English proficiency test. To cut a long story short, no matter how much logic and specific evidence I used in my appeal argumentation, the university always sided with the university staff about whom I was complaining. The errant staff in question could rely on fallacies (e.g. cherry-picking of facts) and imprecise statements to explain why they gave my essay a bad grade, and they wound up being always right in the eyes of the university... because why oppose your own people, right? Oh, and let's not forget that it is difficult for Danish people in the public sector to get fired — which is probably the main reason why they can get away with giving bad grades for no good reason, AND not face any significant consequence for doing so. In short, the appeal procedure is an extreme waste of time and energy. It is a sham process whereby the student would be fighting against a system that is built to favour university staff by default. c. The University of Copenhagen is so cheapskate that MA students don't get to do the thesis defence due to cost-saving measures. It has been this way for years (and apparently it's the same with BA students), and the official justification is that their teaching staff don't have enough hours (time = money) to spare for thesis defences. What is weird is that certain normal courses get an oral "defence" as part of the final exam, but then the higher-stakes MA-thesis course gets no defence... yeah, go figure. You may think that the lack of an MA thesis defence is good because it means less work on your part, but when you consider what I have explained in points (a) and (b), this very lack of an MA thesis defence is what could royally screw up your job-hunting prospects as a non-EU foreigner in Denmark. The MA thesis grade is the first grade from the top in your degree transcript, so if you are unlucky enough to be on the losing end of points (a) and (b), you would end up applying to jobs with an ugly degree transcript: one that shows an unfairly low grade at the very top of the list of grades. And of course, HR personnel and hiring managers would not know (or bother to understand) that low grades from the University of Copenhagen could be the result of an inherently unfair grading system and/or the involvement of incompetent instructors-cum-examiners. Also, you only get a digital version of your MA degree upon graduation. The official reason from the Danish government is that this digitisation of degrees helps to modernise Danish society — but at this point, you probably can already tell this is just another cost-saving measure. This university will only continue to cut corners, and although the degree-digitisation affects non-MA students as well, MA students will — as non-STEM people — obviously take the brunt of these cuts. d. Non-EU students are treated as cash cows at this university. Many years ago, education used to be free for non-EU students in Denmark (just like how it has always been free for EU students), so one thing you have to get used to nowadays is that Denmark is economically similar to the USA (and other US-like societies) in its practical perception of foreigners as another revenue stream for schools. While the tuition fees for MA degrees at this university are not as astronomical as those in the USA, the financial cost is still rather significant for middle-class people from non-EU countries; and it was as though I was paying for something that is free. Not only was I paying for the services of certain questionable Danish instructors/examiners, but I was also paying for subpar academic resources. Once, there was a training session for some film production class, and the training was in relation to a piece of video-editing software. The training happened WITHOUT access to a computer lab — can you believe that? It happened as a lecture and live demonstration by (paid) student volunteers, with people in the audience (including me) taking notes as we eyeballed those student volunteers' clicking within the software's UI. I remember asking why we didn't have access to a computer lab for the training (because actually practising is better than eye power any day), and the official excuse was — you guessed it — a lack of resources. The university's software library was also mostly useless (in my experience). I tried to use the EndNote version available in the library, and the licence turned out to be expired. In the end, I simply used Zotero, which is freely available on the Internet. The university's digital library of academic literature was only slightly better in the sense that it wasn't mostly useless. Generally, I could find and download most journal articles and e-books that I needed for my academic research; but there were multiple occasions when I found great journal articles that I couldn't download because the University of Copenhagen wasn't subscribed to such-and-such academic service. Notably, I could not even access the premium version of the Chicago Manual of Style (a prominent academic reference style) to check for reference rules because the university lacked an online subscription to the manual. On another occasion, I found an excellent journal article from Cambridge University that I could not download but badly wanted, and I had to ask my course instructor (who used to teach at Cambridge University) if he was able to download it for me. When you also consider that this university has been having rental woes for a long time now, plus what I have explained in point (c), it becomes even clearer why I say that non-EU students are treated as cash cows. Seeing how financially challenged the University of Copenhagen is, I would not be surprised if payments from non-EU students are being used to subsidise non-rental costs as well: #FridayBar fridges in on-campus departmental pantries, maybe? MORAL OF THE STORY: Paying for an MA degree from this university for the sake of getting your foot in the door of the Danish job market would be a pricey move that could involve infuriating instances of injustice. You should consider alternative ways to enter the Danish job market.
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Hello everyone, I was enrolled at Fleming College in Peterborough, and I strongly recommend choosing another option. The professors here are extremely strict—some lock their doors as soon as class starts, refusing to let students in even if they are just a minute late. There is little flexibility or understanding from the faculty, making the learning experience frustrating. If you’re an international student, I strongly advise you to stay away. Many international students, including myself, have experienced racism from both students and professors. The lack of support and inclusivity makes it even harder to adjust. I wish someone had warned me before enrolling—I regret choosing this college and feel like I wasted my money. If I could do it again, I would have gone to Humber or Sheridan instead, where students are treated with more respect and consideration. If you’re looking for a supportive and welcoming learning environment, I highly suggest looking elsewhere.
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