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Kingston University

140 reviews
3.92 / 5 based on 140 reviews
Useful  |  5
Arlene A
University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, United States
Statistics, Undergraduate, New Jersey Consortium for International Studies
Student life
Describe host city:
Students equally interact with the local and student community
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Nightlife: Takes place mostly within the university/student environment
Travel, Activities: Takes place both within and outside of the university/student environment
Personal social experience
Activities
Nightlife
Travel
Overall
Personal comments
Best pub? Kingston Mill on Monday nights (£1 drinks). Very cozy. Kings Tun (Wetherspoon's) is a chain pub, by the way. Best club? They're all the same, but Oceania was the least skanky of all. Restaurant? Frango's Chicken. A word of advice: Get the (really crappy) student newspaper, SUblime. Sometimes they have free tickets for the Odeon cinema (Friday and Saturday late-night showings only). Be careful on the high street around 9 p.m., but especially after 11 p.m. when the pubs let out. Somerfield's grocery is overpriced. Use Sainsbury's. Dine, at least once, on the river.
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Useful  |  12
Arlene A
University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, United States
Statistics, Undergraduate, New Jersey Consortium for International Studies
Housing
Type of housing: Very limited on-campus housing
Arranged by: Host university
If returning, I would choose: On campus
Why?
Many other international students had problems with their landladies and landlords. Off-campus housing was far from campus, with few amenities (i.e. inconvenient).
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Personal assessment
Cost
Facilities
Location
Cleanliness
Space
Personal comments
On-campus housing is very nice...if your flatmates aren't messy in the kitchen and toilet. But it is very difficult to get on-campus housing, and recently the university lost its bid for some land on which they were going to build a new student community. Off-campus housing required a lot of hassle with landlords and landladies, and the amenities vary wildly even though the cost is uniform (about £75 per week). The public transportation is great, but can really get to you if you need to get somewhere quickly or if you're light on cash. Housing is luck of the draw when you're an international student. I was scheduled to live in a private residence, but that fell through. I was homeless for about 4 hours, until the two managers of the programme found a place on campus and one of them personally drove me to the buildling after business hours.
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Useful  |  2
Arlene A
University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, United States
Statistics, Undergraduate, New Jersey Consortium for International Studies
Languages
Language of instruction: English
Was learning English a key decision factor?
No, it wasn't.
Language difficulties
Social
Educational
Administrative / Institutional
Overall
Personal comments
English is not English everywhere in the world. There are some British phrases that are different than American ones. I visited family in Italy, and when they asked me how to say something in English, I started to get confused myself. Londoners are tight-lipped and do not care to speak to strangers, so becoming friends is rare. They also like to schedule a lot, so do not expect a "yes" when you randomly invite them to dinner or a movie. Most of my friends were American, and most of our British friends...we couldn't read too well whether they enjoyed our company or not. But after a few months, you can feel them out. The worst is the "British face" (that's my word for the expression they give when they are disgusted with something). It's the face someone gives when they pull a huge bowl of molded leftovers out of their refridgerator. It just...ouch...it's a look that will sting you because they when they give it, they are giving it in response to YOU. It...oh gosh...it hurts! To this day, I don't know how to respond when they give that look.
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Useful  |  5
Arlene A
University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, United States
Statistics, Undergraduate, New Jersey Consortium for International Studies
Expenses
Main source of funding:
Family
Other sources of funding:
Other
Work opportunities:
It was not legal for me to work
Personal spending habits
You can avoid using the telephone a lot, so that cuts down. Text messanging (SMS) is very popular and cheap. There are some good pay-as-you-go mobile phone deals out there. Housing's about the same. For travel, find the budget airlines (but DO NOT use coach buses! They are terrible!) Trains and buses are very good as well; there are a variety of different tickets and fares.
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Nightlife, Food, Overall:
was more expensive than at home.
Housing, Telephone, Travel:
was the same price as at home.
Accessibility of student needs
Second-hand text books
Second-hand household items
Computers / Internet
Administrative
Money from home
Personal comments
When you go shopping for yourself (and you will have to because British students cook for themselves most of the time), plan out your meals for the week and buy those ingredients. It saves you money and ensures that you won't waste anything. Buy in bulk if possible, but be careful because, remember, you need to CARRY HOME your items. If you live in the residence halls, keep the place clean! They check the flat for damages and hygiene, so if it's dirty, they'll charge you £11 each time. Choose your public tranportation pass WISELY; there are STUDENT DISCOUNTS on public transportation (One is for the trains only, the other is for ALL TRANSPORT, be careful which one you use).
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Useful  |  2
Arlene A
University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, United States
Statistics, Undergraduate, New Jersey Consortium for International Studies
Overall
I wish I had known...
There are so many international citizens in London, that it is very unlikely that you'll experience true British culture.
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In my opinion:
Most people loved it.
Important factors in my choice
(1) Unimportant – (4) Very important
Academic reasons
3
Culture
3
Costs
2
Activities
2
Campus life
2
Party / people
2
Weather / location
2
Personal recommendation
The buildlings in the university are falling apart and are unhygienic. However, the residence halls are adequate and the staff at the halls is nice, too. The students don't seem to care much about a student community, and most of them are apathetic in their studies. Just concentrate on the work and soaking it all in, and you'll be fine.
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During my experience abroad, I ...
(1) Never – (4) A lot
Became familiar with another culture
2
Traveled
3
Improved language skills
3
Met people from other countries
3
Became more independent
3
Partied a lot
3
Experienced a change in life
3
Advanced my studies & career
3
Final comments
Bring an umbrella.
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Useful  |  3
Arlene A
University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, United States
Statistics, Undergraduate, New Jersey Consortium for International Studies
Academic
Course recommendations
If you're an American student, let me give you a head's up: British students don't normally schedule themselves. They are scheduled by the administration, and if they have a choice between modules, then they are given the opportunity to choose. Thus: there is no module guide with times of lectures and the lecturers teaching them. The two managers of the programme will submit your requests for module scheduling.
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My academic experiences
Quality of courses
Variety of courses
Access to resources
Interaction with teachers
Interaction with international students
Interaction with local students
Personal comments
The lecturers don't get to know your name. In fact, they don't care to; your relationship with them is strictly professional...or at least that's what it seems like...With second-year and third-year students, they get to know the permanant (not the part-time or temporary) lecturers, and usually are guided by them during their theses and porjects. But with you, they probably won't, unless they are intrigued by your foreign-ness. The politics lecturers: they will say things just to get a rise out of you, just to make you speak up during seminar. Most lecturers are part-time and have jobs full-time elsewhere, so getting ahold of them is very frustrating.
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My opinion of the university assessment
Exams at end of course
Exams throughout the course
Essays and/or projects at the end of course
Essays and/or projects throughout the course
Overall