University rating
Tell us about your overall university experience so far.
My university experience has been a beautifully chaotic mix of triumph, growth, accidental naps in public spaces, and one too many “Why did I think this degree was a good idea?” moments. If I had to sum it up, I’d say it was like a Netflix coming-of-age series—heartwarming, occasionally dramatic, full of plot twists, and somehow always involving coffee.
The best parts of uni?
First, the people. I met friends who have seen me at my best, my worst, and my “submitting an assignment at 11:59:59 while whisper-screaming” phase. These are the people who would quiz me on lecture notes, drag me out for fresh air when I hadn’t seen sunlight in 36 hours, and celebrate every academic victory like I’d just won an Olympic medal in Essay Writing. The sense of community made even the messiest days feel survivable.
Then there were the opportunities—actual grown-up opportunities that made me feel like a functioning human in society. Internships, academic projects, workshops, and random events I only went to for free snacks but ended up loving. Uni showed me I could push myself further than I ever thought… mostly because deadlines pushed me first.
I also grew in ways that aren’t on any transcript. I became more confident, more independent, and significantly better at pretending I understood what was happening in group projects (spoiler: I did not). I learned how to balance life, work, study, and sleep—which, yes, is a fancy way of saying sleep often lost, but the effort was there.
And the worst parts?
Oh, where to begin. Let’s start with the Academic Black Holes: those weeks where every possible assignment, exam, quiz, project, and presentation happened at the exact same time, like they were conspiring to test both my GPA and my will to live. My diet during those periods was 80% caffeine, 20% hope.
Group projects also deserve an honorary award for emotionally preparing me for the real world. Nothing teaches conflict resolution like trying to diplomatically explain to a teammate that they cannot, in fact, submit a blank slide and call it “minimalist design.”
Then there’s the financial struggle—because nothing screams adulthood like paying for textbooks that you use once and then become very expensive doorstops. My bank account and I have been through things together.
And yes, I’d be lying if I said there weren’t moments of doubt. Times when I questioned my major, my abilities, my life choices, or the fact that I signed up for an 8 a.m. lecture even though I am biologically incompatible with mornings.
But here’s the thing:
Even the worst moments ended up shaping the best version of me. The stress taught me resilience. The failures taught me humility. The chaotic nights taught me time management (eventually). And the uncomfortable experiences pushed me to grow in ways I never expected.
In the end, uni wasn’t perfect—but it was meaningful, hilarious, challenging, and unforgettable. It gave me memories I’ll laugh about for years, skills I’ll actually use, and friendships I’ll keep forever. And honestly? I wouldn’t trade the experience for anything… except maybe lower tuition.
Course rating
Course rating
Studying International Relations and Spanish has been like juggling global politics with grammar rules—chaotic, occasionally overwhelming, but surprisingly rewarding.
The best parts?
I love how the course mixes big-picture thinking with real cultural insight. One day I’m debating international conflicts, and the next I’m discussing Latin American identity entirely in Spanish. Seeing the world through political theory and another language makes everything feel more connected and meaningful.
Spanish itself has been a highlight. There’s nothing like the moment when you suddenly understand a fast conversation and think, “Wow, maybe I am bilingual after all.” Plus, getting to learn about different cultures through films, books, and media makes studying feel a lot less like work and a lot more like travelling without the airfare.
IR, on the other hand, makes me feel like a world leader in training—at least until the readings reach 60 pages and my brain clocks out halfway through. Still, it’s genuinely exciting to study topics that actually matter and shape the world around us.
The worst parts?
The workload… absolutely brutal at times. IR readings can feel endless, and just when I survive that, Spanish throws the subjunctive at me like a linguistic plot twist. Listening exams are particularly humbling—nothing makes you question your life choices like hearing a native speaker talk at 300 miles per hour.
Switching constantly between two completely different subjects can also be mentally whiplash-inducing. One minute I’m analysing foreign policy, the next I’m trying to remember why lapiz is masculine but mano is feminine.
University halls
What do you think about the safety, condition, location and cost of your accommodation?
My uni accommodation is honestly the definition of “mid”—not terrible enough to rant about on the internet, but not good enough to brag about either. It’s the kind of place where everything technically works, but always with a little personality: the heater that only has two moods (Arctic and Sahara), the kitchen that somehow smells like toast even when no one’s made toast, and the walls so thin you learn way too much about your neighbours’ sleep schedules. It’s fine, it’s functional, it’s liveable… but it definitely won’t be featured in any aesthetic student housing brochures anytime soon.