Quality of UCI or other calfornia based physics programs

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the quality and reputation of the physics program at the University of California, Irvine (UCI), particularly from the perspective of a prospective exchange student. The focus includes concerns about course quality, teaching effectiveness, and the overall academic environment, alongside the participant's personal motivations for choosing a school based on location and training opportunities.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested
  • Homework-related

Main Points Raised

  • One participant expresses a desire to know about UCI's reputation for its physics program, primarily for personal training reasons rather than academic ones.
  • Another participant questions what aspects of the physics program are of concern, suggesting that the quality of research opportunities may be limited for a one-year exchange student.
  • A participant indicates that the quality of courses may vary based on the teaching effectiveness of individual professors, regardless of the university's overall reputation.
  • Concerns are raised about the reputation of UCI, with one participant noting that they have not heard anything negative about the university and citing rankings that suggest a strong performance in physics education.
  • Specific rankings and statistics about UCI's physics department are mentioned, including its ranking among public research universities and its production of undergraduate degrees.
  • One participant suggests reaching out to faculty or current students for more personalized insights into the program.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants generally agree that UCI does not have a bad reputation, but there is no consensus on the specific quality of courses or teaching effectiveness. Multiple viewpoints regarding the importance of course quality and research opportunities remain present.

Contextual Notes

Participants express uncertainty regarding the specific aspects of the physics program that may impact their experience, such as the variability in teaching quality and the limitations of being an exchange student.

Who May Find This Useful

Prospective exchange students considering UCI or similar institutions, individuals interested in the quality of physics programs in California, and those evaluating academic environments based on personal training or athletic commitments.

Dracovich
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I asked a few months ago but didn't get a response so i'll try again :)

I'm considdering going to USA for one year as an exchange student, but i must admit that my motivation for it is less then academic. I'm picking it almost solely because i want to train in USA, and my coach there has a school on Orange County. So i was thinking about going to University of Calfornia, Irvine. But although my motivation and choosing of school isn't really because of the academics, i nontheless want to be going to a school that's horrible.

So i was hoping you guys could either tell me from experience, if UCI has a good reputation for their physics program, or perhaps point to some reputable ranking page. From my googling about this it seems that UCI is not considdered bad, but i haven't found anything concrete about their physics program, it's mostly general about the school.

P.S. While i AM mostly considdering UCI because of it's location, i am willing to considder other schools in south california since there are good gyms in pretty much all of socal, but not being close to Irvine would mean i'd have to train somewhere else and switch coaches which i'd rather not :/ But like i said, if you know of other schools there that have a really good rep then i would considder it. Caltech IS an option my school offers, but they only take exchange students for one semester.
 
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When you say physics program, what do you mean? It's not clear what your concerns are exactly.

I assume you're an undergrad. So - the amount and quality of the research you could potentially do is not very high no matter where you go, especially being a one-year exchange student.

Or are you worried that the courses aren't very good? How many physics classes will you end up taking each term? 2-4? The quality of the course will also depend on how good the prof is at teaching, and that can be bad even at a top-notch university like Harvard. UCI has a graduate physics program, so there should be courses pitched to whatever level you'd like. Your best bet is to look at the course catalog and see if they offer the courses you're interested in.
 
Yeah i was mostly considdering if the courses were well taught etc, i realize i won't be doing much of any research there. And yes i would be going in my third year (which is the last year of BS study here), but since i should be taking my bachelor project here at home, i will propably have to take a mix of undergrad and grad courses to fill an entire year, and then do my BS project once i get back home.

Looking at the course schedual is pretty much what I've been doing, and it looks ok actually :) But i was unsure of if the school perhaps had a bad rep or something since i know nothing about it aside from what their webpage says.
 
I haven't heard anything bad about UCI, and UC schools tend to be pretty good, so I don't think anything disastrous is going to happen. And from their webpage, it does say:

The UC Irvine Department of Physics & Astronomy is ranked 10th among U.S. public research universities for scientific influence in physics (ISI). The department is the 11th largest producer of physics undergraduate degrees in the nation (NCES), and the School of Physical Sciences ranks 2nd nationally in the number of undergraduate degrees awarded to minority students (NCES). UC Irvine is ranked 12th among all public universities in the U.S. News & World Report annual college survey.

Sounds pretty good to me.

You might want to get in touch with one of the members of the staff (from this page http://www.physics.uci.edu/NEW/address.shtml , maybe Deborah Bozek or Kristen Lodgard) and see if they can hook you up with an email address or two of some students whom they might think would be useful to talk to.
 
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Ok great :) thanks for your help
 

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