Hankuk University of Foreign Studies vs Le Cordon Bleu Paris vs European School of Economics - ESE vs Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology - KAIST vs Association of Asia-Pacific Business Schools - AAPBS

Side-by-side comparison from 78 verified student reviews. Scan one row at a time — winners are highlighted

Quick verdict
Higher overall rating: Le Cordon Bleu Paris (4.70)
Hankuk University of Foreign Studies: wins 1/7 categories
Le Cordon Bleu Paris: wins 0/7 categories
European School of Economics - ESE: wins 2/7 categories
Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology - KAIST: wins 1/7 categories
Association of Asia-Pacific Business Schools - AAPBS: wins 0/7 categories
Informatics Institute of Technology - IIT: wins 0/7 categories
Handong Global University: wins 3/7 categories
Comparing
Best programme: B.Sc. in Political Science: Global Politics
4.70
Top
Read more reviews
9 reviews
×
Best programme: Culinary Arts
London, The United Kingdom
4.50
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39 reviews
×
Best programme: Business Administration
Best programme: Computer Science
Best programme: Computer Science
Best programme: Civil and Environmental Engineering
Category ratings
Facilities
3.00
4.56
4.00
4.75
Win
Not rated
1.67
3.00
Location
3.00
4.78
4.79
Win
3.85
Not rated
3.33
3.00
Professors
4.00
4.67
4.44
3.75
Not rated
3.00
5.00
Win
Internationality
3.00
4.67
4.51
2.55
Not rated
3.67
5.00
Win
Student life
5.00
Win
4.00
4.43
3.15
Not rated
2.33
4.00
Value
4.00
4.00
4.31
4.05
Not rated
3.00
5.00
Win
Accommodation
3.00
3.22
4.11
Win
3.90
Not rated
1.33
2.00
Pros & Cons
Pros
  • +Vibrant international atmosphere and student activities
  • +Supportive professors and well-regarded alumni network
  • +Focus on internationalism and exchange student support
  • +exceptional quality of teaching and knowledgeable, approachable instructors
  • +strong emphasis on precision, quality, and professional skill development
  • +welcoming environment and supportive alumni network
  • +International relevance & practical/hands-on experience
  • +Welcoming & supportive environment with friendly, helpful staff/faculty
  • +Diverse, small classes with experienced professors
  • +High-quality academics and challenging curriculum
  • +Excellent facilities and research opportunities
  • +Financial benefits and student support

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  • +Globally recognized IT degrees from reputable UK universities
  • +Encouragement of extracurricular activities alongside academics
  • +Dedicated and helpful lecturers
  • +Diverse global environment
  • +Focus on major programs
Cons
  • -Students dislike administrative & management issues.
  • -Students dislike outdated facilities.
  • -Students dislike lack of clear communication.
  • -Administrative and management issues cause significant frustration.
  • -Outdated facilities and technology hinder the learning experience.
  • -Lack of career support and industry relevance leads to dissatisfaction.
  • -Administrative and management issues are a frequent source of frustration.
  • -Outdated facilities and a lack of modern resources are often criticized.
  • -Poor teaching quality and unengaging course content are commonly cited.
  • -Administrative and management issues are a major source of frustration.
  • -Outdated facilities and lack of resources hinder learning.
  • -Poor communication and unclear expectations cause confusion.

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  • -Administrative and management issues are a significant source of frustration.
  • -Outdated facilities negatively impact the learning experience.
  • -Poor teaching quality and disorganized project management are major complaints.
  • -Administrative and management issues create frustration.
  • -Outdated facilities and equipment are a major drawback.
  • -Lack of clear communication and organization from staff is problematic.
Rating summary
What students say

This institution receives top marks for student life, achieving a perfect score. It also scores well in its academic offerings and perceived value for money. However, its facilities, location, and accommodation all received average ratings, indicating potential areas for improvement. Internationality is also rated moderately.

This institution receives high marks for its Location, scoring 4.78, and for its Professors and Internationality, both at 4.67. Facilities also rate well at 4.56. Student Life and Value are both solid at 4.00. The weakest area is Accomodation, which received a rating of 3.22.

Student feedback indicates strong satisfaction across several aspects of university life. Location stands out as the highest-rated area, with internationality and professors also receiving excellent marks. While student life and value are also highly regarded, facilities represent the weakest area among the surveyed categories. Overall, the institution demonstrates a solid performance with clear strengths in its external and academic offerings.

Examining the provided ratings, the university demonstrates notable strengths in its **Facilities**, achieving an impressive 4.75. **Value** also scores highly at 4.05. Conversely, **Internationality** presents the most significant area for improvement, with a rating of 2.55. Other categories like Professors, Location, Student Life, and Accomodation fall within a moderate range, suggesting a solid but not exceptional experience in those aspects.

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This institution shows a mixed but generally positive performance across key metrics. Internationality stands out as its strongest area, closely followed by location and professor quality. However, the university faces challenges with its facilities and accommodation, which received significantly lower scores. Student life also presents an area for improvement, while value for money is rated solidly in the middle.

This institution showcases impressive strengths in its professors, internationality, and overall value, all receiving perfect scores. Conversely, accommodation stands out as the weakest area, with a considerably lower rating. Facilities and student life are rated moderately well, with location also falling into this mid-range category. The university offers a compelling academic and global experience, though prospective students may wish to consider housing options carefully.

Reviews summary
Highlights

All 6 reviews are positive, averaging 4.33/5 stars. Students highlight the welcoming atmosphere, enjoyable campus, and supportive international student organization, with excellent experiences as exchange students.

All 9 reviews are positive, with an average rating of 4.67/5. Students highlight exceptional teaching quality and knowledgeable instructors, along with impeccable facilities. The curriculum and emphasis on precision are frequently praised.

University reviews are overwhelmingly positive, with ~95% of feedback highlighting an engaging, internationally relevant learning experience and a welcoming environment. Students appreciate practical learning, helpful staff, and international class settings. No negative feedback was recorded.

Nearly all reviews are positive, highlighting good professors, peers, and overall satisfaction. The average rating is 3.9/5.

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With an average rating of 3.33/5, university reviews indicate ~67% positive feedback praising reputable UK degrees, helpful lecturers, and extracurricular engagement. However, ~33% of reviews express dissatisfaction, citing a lack of quality facilities and frustrating project experiences.

This university receives overwhelmingly positive feedback, with a 4/5 average rating. The global campus environment with diverse students is a highlight. A single reviewer found mandatory double majors detracted from focus.

Rating distribution
5★
33%
67%
59%
15%
0%
33%
0%
4★
67%
33%
36%
60%
0%
33%
100%
3★
0%
0%
5%
25%
0%
0%
0%
2★
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
1★
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
33%
0%
Most useful review
Most liked
From an Exchange Program

As an exchange student it was a little difficult for me, at least at the beginning, to comunicate and find locations inside the Campus. The majority of the staff (unless they were in the International office) did not speak English, so you need to fond korean classmates/friends that will help you with that (they are really nice!). Out of that I really liked the classes taken there. Unfortunately, my classes where not given by any korean proffesor; only foreign ones. But sitll I really liked them. The knowledge is wide and it becomes easy in participating at sessions. Besides, the self-studing method becomes the best tool to improve your knowledge and have good grades!There are also a lot of team work which gives the result of many opinions and points of view that are fun to work with. All of the classes where given in the new buliding and that was really good. But all the rest of the buildings had an old infraestructure. Maybe they could invest and upgrade those buildings. The location of the Seoul Campus is really good because it is near the subway and if the cafeteria food does not suit for you, you will have a lot of options around it. In general I really liked my experience at Hankuk University of Foreign Studies.

Student in 2013

I really enjoyed my time at LCB! I've found that my skills when I entered the work force were much higher than others. I think though there was a big portion missing in recipe development and composition. True- we did learn it through memorizing the recipes, but we really were missing classes on how different ingredients affect the final textures.. how you can change them... etc. That I still am not an expert in .. and I create recipes! Ouf! Also, I don't know if you still do a month of sugar work... but that really wasn't necessary and should be either cut or minimized to just 2 lessons. It's such a niche skill to know that I would have really preferred more technical skills. I loved the old location. The "rumors" I'm getting about the new location are that it's not as good, unfortunately - that i's become more of a money focused/marketing machine. I really hope that this image can be fixed as I love LCB and enjoyed my time there! Oh also - there should be more help for students to get jobs and featuring old students accomplishments - from cookbook launches to new bakeries so that current and old students can support them.

The amazing professors/teachers there!

First of all since my campus was in the heart of Rome, the place and inside of the university was like a whole museum. I love how friendly and helpful the staff was, the professors were one in a million. I love how they did all their best to tell us about the subjects in detail and in a fun way with examples for us to get into it more. I liked how they make time and engage in it and actually help us to teach us, so it was all in one reading writing with our own brain and infos searching for the sources by ourselves listening but also being able to express our own way of knowledge on the topics!

Great tech education; not so great instructors

I did my undergrad in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science here, graduated in 2022. Pros: good research, great facilities, good programmes, completely free tuition, inexpensive accommodation + allowance, flexibility in course choice, wide material coverage, all pros of Korea (e.g. safety, convenient travelling) Cons: strict attendance, some lectures of poor quality, competition and relative grading, hard to make local friends/connections, all cons of Korea (e.g. no English whatsoever outside campus) The school is very much research-oriented, with lots and lots of great resources and facilities to do research. So if you want to do a research graduate or post-graduate course here and you like a particular programme, this is definitely a good place for you. That said, most profs are good researches, not necessarily good educators. University-wide policy is that every course essential for degree completion is taught in English. Thus, with a few exceptions in Humanities, and some very obscure courses, you won't have to learn Korean. The professors had to learn English though. And despite that most of them have lived for a certain period of time in the US, some really struggle to teach in English. In worst cases it will come down to the professor simply reading the slides in the lecture. Couple that with a strict attendance policy, you get a pure torture. On a positive note, most of the newly coming young profs are not like that. Lab/research experience is also very different across different professors. Some are complete grind where you only do what professor tells you to do, and end up working 55+ hours a week. Some are nice and cheerful productive environments where you can even have your name on the authors list of couple papers being an undergrad, and enjoy the research process throughout. The courses choice is wide and the programme is really flexible about what you do. This is especially true for larger departments like the School of Electrical Engineering - which is in fact, called "School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering" in Korean, and I don't even know why the word Electrical is even there - you won't get to learn anything like High Power Electrics. Depending on a course, the amount of theory and hands-on differs significantly from completely theoretical courses to labs with almost zero theory taught. Overall, I would like to get slightly more hands-on experience, but it was alright. The material coverage is on a very good balance in between breadth and depth. Perhaps, it's trying to get both breadth and depth, which results in a relatively high workload. And this high workload is something that is partly fuelled by all grading being done relatively. For example, to get an A, you don't have to score 90% - you have to be roughly above avg + 1 stddev of the normalised score distribution in your group. This encourages some instructors and assistants to either make the workload extremely high, or make the exams extremely difficult just for the sake of difficulty, or both. Yet, if you don't care too much about your grades, but still keep studying, it's hard to fail a particular course. Social life is something that is difficult to have in KAIST if you are an international student. 90% of the students are Korean, and most of them feel shy to/don't really want to reach out to international students. Reaching out to those people yourself will rarely help. Out of the remaining students most are not too much into socialising. What are the chances that you'll like the remaining few? Most clubs are also primarily Korean with all their activities conducted in Korean. Should be somewhat easier if you speak Korean, but not necessarily as easy as it would be elsewhere in the world.

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A fine academic experience

In my opinion, the Informatics Institute of Technology (IIT) gives its students a well balanced academic experience providing them with the opportunity to engage in multiple extracurricular activities while granting the ability to hold globally recognized IT related degrees. The only flaw I see in this overall pleasant academic experience is the lack of quality in facilities. Other than that, the Informatics Institute of Technology excels in providing a fine academic experience.

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