Cancel

Open app

Search

Nerd Nite Photos

You might also consider

Recommended Reviews - Nerd Nite

Your trust is our priority, so businesses can't pay to alter or remove their reviews. Learn more about reviews.
Yelp app icon
Browse more easily on the app
Review Feed Illustration

11 years ago

Helpful 2
Thanks 0
Love this 2
Oh no 0

You might also consider

Verify this business for free

People searched for Social Clubs 977 times last month within 15 miles of this business.

Verify this business

General Assembly Atlanta

General Assembly Atlanta

(16 reviews)

Old Fourth Ward

This place was super cool. I went here for a digital marketing class. It's located in Ponce City…read moreMarket on the West side of the building near West Elm. Parking is via the ParkMobile app and is $2 per hour. There is a massive amount of classrooms and what appears to be co-working spaces. WiFi is free and plentiful. I would definitely come back here for a class.

I have been to General Assembly Atlanta two times now for different workshops and cannot be more…read moreimpressed with the business, location, accessibility, setup, and overall operations. The first workshop I attended was an intro to Adobe Illustrator. We had people of many different professional backgrounds in attendance. Although the class was beginner, they also answered the questions of those with a little more experience. When the presenter did not know the answer, the group may have chimed in to help. (Did I ever mention I love Atlanta) The most recent workshop I attended was the Transferable Skills workshop led by Nita Penn. This session was amazing! It was interactive, relevant, high energy, and applicable to our everyday lives. Nita was well prepared, fun, energetic, and inspiring. A lot of times we take workshops that work on our hard skills and it was nice that General Assembly scheduled something to help us learn about soft skills and how they can be transferable and applicable in various situations. I hope to see Nita continue to lead workshops at this location. I can guarantee that as she starts doing more workshops on various topics I will for sure be there with my friends! I am looking forward to building my personal and professional portfolio and am thankful for the opportunities that General Assembly is providing at such a reasonable cost.

Georgia State University

Georgia State University

(93 reviews)

Downtown

Real talk, Georgia has like 7 ranks of schools 1 being highest 7 being lowest…read more 3. and 4. really are on the same level of prestige 1. Really High-Ranking Schools, it would be difficult to get into (Georgia Institute of Technology, Emory University, University of Georgia) and Mercer 2. Safety Schools like GA State University (merged with Ga Perimeter College), Kennesaw State University (merged with Southern Polytechnical State University), Georgia Southern University, Columbus State University 3. HBCUs which are really in a class of their own (Morehouse, Clayton State University, Clark Atlanta University, Albany State, Savannah State University, Fort Valley State University, etc) or Atlanta Technical College 4. All woman colleges like Spellman or Agnes Scott 5. Colleges weirdly named small private schools or religious schools you see ads for or considered but will most likely not go to/not ranked Nationally not an HBCU PBI or Minority Majority School but are for the local population (Ga Perimeter, Ga Gwinnett, Gwinnett Tech, Augusta State, Valdosta State, Middle Georgia, South Georgia, UWG, UNG, Dalton, Armstrong Atlantic State University, College of Coastal Georgia, Ga College & State University - not to be confused with Georgia State University, Devry University, Life University, Beulah Heights University, South University, Thomas University, Shorter University, Thomas University, Reinhardt University, Baulder, Wesleyan Abraham Baldwin Agricultural, Brewton-Parker, Berry, Paine, Columbia Theological Seminary, Lagrange, Piedmont, Truett-McConnell, Emmanuel, 6. Lol no offense imo but rip-off or Non-Accredited Colleges like SCAD the Art Institute of Atlanta 7. last and least lol 2-year colleges or Technical College or Vocational Schools Some of the rankings blend but generally shoot for the higher ranks of schools if you can't start at the lower ranks. Unfortunately, there's a huge gap between the Really Highly Ranked Colleges and the Safety Schools which seems like there is a barrier of entry for marginalized students or POC, but you could work hard and transfer even if you start at a 2 year college or Technical College. So, by all means considerably Id say in the state of Georgia, GA State University is a great option if you care for Research and name and prestige and diversity and value financially Return of Interest.

HONORS COLLEGE ONLY! (other GSU faculty and staff were great)…read more Parents and students: be aware that the Honors College at GSU has a troubling internal culture that can impact student experiences. Leadership frequently forgot the names of Black students and faculty who had been part of the program for years, while white and lighter-skinned students and staff were consistently remembered and engaged. Students were also treated unfairly. For example, one student with ADHD/Autism was yelled at by a leadership employee for harmless stimming, and others were spoken about negatively behind their backs, including being called "weird" despite social challenges. Black students were often only engaged for photo ops or promotional events, rather than receiving genuine support. Overall, the environment can feel hostile and unwelcoming, and students should know that office culture may affect their experience in this program.

Goethe Zentrum - Atlanta - Goethe-Zentrum Atlanta/ German Cultural Center

Goethe Zentrum - Atlanta

(3 reviews)

Downtown

I have been taking German classes remotely with Goethe since last year and have been amazed at how…read moremuch more quickly my German has improved. They offer accelerated-learning classes, and I have been taking classes with their awesome instructor, Franz. The class size has been VERY small, so we get a great deal of 1:1 attention from Franz. The classes are offered in the evenings, after my regular work hours and have been something I look forward to each week. If you're wondering why your German apps aren't working well, I suggest you give this a try!

I have taken German Language lessons at Goethe for about 11 years, off and on. Before I went to…read moreGoethe, I was interested in language, but I had really only taken Spanish in a classroom environment, and that was in middle school, high school, and college. Learning a language as an adult is an entirely different situation. First of all, you have to motivate yourself. There are no "grades," so you have to decide on your own goals and go after them. Having said that, European languages generally and German in particular make it easy to identify goals, because there are certification exams tied to the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages. So you can say "I am certified in German at a B2 level" and it means something concrete about your vocabulary and your ability to express yourself in a foreign language. The European method for learning languages is different from what you may have experienced as an American in high school. In high school, you cover many topics rather quickly. Of course, you're attending class every day, but you don't often have to speak. Certainly you do not have to speak extemporaneously on a regular basis. You cover grammatical topics and life themes (like "clothing" or "food"), but you're not necessarily asked to do anything with the information. At least, that's how my high school experience went. At Goethe (and at its sister organization, the Alliance Francaise, which is located in the same office at Colony Square), the instructional method is MUCH more focused on the learner producing speech in the foreign language. Yes, there is written homework and grammar exercises, but the majority of class time is spent in speaking. The best instructors at Goethe will lead the class into themes of current events or other hot topics to try to get people talking. Sure, at first, you can't say very much, so you can have a heated debate on everyone's favorite color, but as you slowly progress through the classes, you pick it up! It's the "tortoise" method, not the "hare," but I think it produces better quality and longer lasting results. Some people are dismayed by the learning materials, which are exclusively in the target language. That means it's ALL in German. The German publishing companies produce one edition of their materials for the entire world, and then they produce a separate guide with some english translations in it (or they put that part online). It's a cost-saving measure, but it's also quite smart to me. You accustom yourself to only seeing German without getting distracted by the English "crutches" on the page. One drawback that is no fault of Goethe's is that sometimes your classmates do not do their homework. They arrive to class unprepared, and consequently, they drag everyone down with them. Don't be that person. Commit to doing your homework. To the extent that I get frustrated with the institute about this problem, it's that such lazy people have no real deterrent from behaving in this way. As I said before, there are no grades; therefore, you can't flunk or be held back. There are plenty of people in A2 classes that should probably still be in A1. But adults sometimes get a delusional self-perception about their abilities. Always be willing to compare yourself to others in the class and ask yourself whether you truly belong.

Nerd Nite - social_clubs - Updated May 2026

Loading...
Loading...
Loading...