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California College of the Arts - CCA indoor space looks cheap and horrid.

California College of the Arts

(42 reviews)

Its not the same school after 2020 and I'm applaud by CCA self serving attitude towards any BS they…read morecommit. First of all theres been at least two major on campus protest towards the previous president and his money laundering. 90% of your 250k total tuition goes toward the board of trustee. Cca has over 50 since 2021 (last I checked) while faculty werent paid and forced to take adjunct position.l, the first protest was for staff. The second by students who got tired of tuition increases while CCA gave us little in return. They didnt mention the school had a few labs 2021-2024. We were promised job fairs and assistance for internships but I found out were on our own. CCA also forces u to do an internship but if you cant find one yoyr forced to PAY THE SCHOOL FOR AN INTERNSHIP in order to pass. Cca does t care if you dont graduate the only consistancy is asking for $$$$$$. Everything else is a series of pathetic excuses, miscommunication, ans deflection. If you wana be academically challenged and learn technical skills which are important in the industry Id avoid this place at all cost. The only redeeming field left is maybe architure (6yr program) or Interactive (over saturated). Being a UX designer today is hard Id recommended a camp instead its the same equivalence. A lot of these course are hard to judge since they dont update the class summary on workday nor is it transparent. The class experience verse summary are two different things. Ive had low effort classes and the teacher is quick to leave. No office hours unless u demand it and they have a ridiculous on time policy. You'll spend wn extra $500-1k in class materials so aim for digital courses avoid the craft ones, unless your in those field. I hope your rich and have mega support cuz the rest of us its a huge finacial burden with little return. The campus is shit.... Like literally 20 million bucks and the new building is mostly for labs. Btw you cant use these labs unless you pay for a class thats attached to the lab. The only labs for everyone to use is the rapid prototype and 3D printing. The staff working there is somewhat helpful but mostly annoying useless students. I've met awful students working eager to give attitude or dont care. Inside hooper the main building its ugly and cold. Its also noisy because some classes dont have roofs. You can hear people screaming laughing and being disrespectful. CCA hires and accepts trash people. The network here is nonexistent as most of these students are talentless and self serving ppl. Ive met gen z who didnt know what is a stock img. Jesus and ppl who cried over drawing with paper and pencil. Obviously the school only looks for passionate and naive ppl who wana pay for their dream. Its a pity because CCA acceptence rate use to be 30% and they recruited some of the best. Either way its hard to accept after paying 20k a semester after scholarship this is the type of bs anyone can deal. *Look up current and past lawsuits towards this school. They are not a diverse thinking or whatever dei bs they wana hide behind. Lawsuits from a disabled student where they were called "Retarded" by trash campus staff. A jewish professor Fiss was fired for defending her beliefs there were posters of antisemitism on campus before the school took it off but still enjoy deflecting like they didnt do anything wrong. Overall, take the negative reviews seriously and consider choosing a private art school. A university would be better since this school is now an exoensive dipolma mill.

When I first arrived at CCA, a counselor told me that the training was so strong, graduates…read morewouldn't need an MA. She also said every student is guaranteed a paid internship. However, during my transfer year, I was informed that the animation department doesn't qualify for internships--we were basically on our own. A friend in industrial design was told her department was too small to provide internships. Job fairs only offered positions in architecture. I was also shocked to find that around 90% of the faculty did mot know any industry-standard software! The dean, who proudly identified as a traditional animator, seemed unaware what is the current state of the field. Since I transferred during COVID, it was incredibly difficult to understand how to navigate the industry post-graduation. The results speak for themselves: not a single student from my class has secured a job in the animation or any related industry, and it's been three years since we graduated. Most alarming of all was reviewing the faculty portfolios in the animation department. I strongly recommend that anyone considering CCA--or thinking about staying--take a few minutes to look into there work. You may come to the same conclusion many of us did: the animation program at this $50,000-a-year school feels like a scam. Chair Christoph Steger: https://christophsteger.com Chair Meghana Bisineer https://meghanabisineer.com

Academy of Art University - studio classroom

Academy of Art University

(339 reviews)

Financial District, SoMa

I am a graduate from 2012 for the Illustration Department. I, like many other poor lower middle…read moreclass family students with high hopes and dreams, graduated with a dismal outcome. I remember clearly, during the very first day of orientation that there was such a need for illustrators and artists out in the world right now. This may be true, but clearly, despite working my ass off for more than five years, I didn't get a stable income job as an artist. I basically graduated and started working survival jobs, with small freelance gigs sprinkled in-between. And that is the unfortunate reality. Some of my peers got full-time jobs, but you know what? They had a higher success rate because they were all friends with each other, and I asked most people they got job recommendations because of their friends, but if you asked me about their portfolio? Let's just say, its all about networking and not hard work. I went onto campus my first year, and decided to save money by attending online campus. It is a WORLD of big difference. I can't believe I attended their online courses. They don't reduce pricing for online, but that really should have been the case. You don't have access to in-person workshops the way on campus students, and those are FREE because the AAU instructors are the ones doing it for their students. This blew my mind when I went back after 2 years. But all classes at the time of 2011-2012 was $2222 per class, per semester, irregardless of online or offline. Online instructors do a lot less work. Some of them didn't even know how to type. I had one teacher write everything IN ALL CAPS - ALL THE TIME, FOR EVERY SINGLE CRITIQUE. Every year the cost of classes would increase exponentially, but standards remained the same. I remember because money was a big deal. I was only able to get Cal Grant at the time for 4 years only, but I kept wondering what would happen on my fifth or even sixth year. Luckily, it didn't have to be 6 years, but I had to take filler classes in the summer even though they weren't high tier classes. They forced me to take a beginner computer class that was so unnecessary. I already knew so much about computers, and there was no way for me to transfer out of it. The digital art classes at the time were also poor. By the time I graduated, I knew I still had to learn more about painting better; I was getting great grades but really great grades and the level of skill that is needed in current times is not the same. For a school that you have to pay $40,000k a year, and still not getting a job is a shame. It's a sham. And for me to still take art classes to improve now, I mean, for me its a passion to get better and become good so I'll gladly want to pay someone to teach me new skills, but a realization dawned on me, there ARE SO MANY great artists out there right now teaching people digitally online. It's affordable and you don't have to sell your soul to Sallie Mae (AAU's favorite private loan lender), not only that but the works their students produce is amazing. Their career department is fake. During my "senior years" at school, I kept trying to schedule and attend workshops with the career department. I only met with them 1 time. I never got my resume or cover letters looked at, especially when I needed them when I was desperately looking for internship, and emailed them multiple times. Every time there was a scheduled meeting they would cancel. Nobody would answer my calls or email. They emphasized that our industry was more for entrepreneurs during the one workshop I attended, but didn't elaborate. All seniors must take a final course that delves into business basics for 1 semester only. In my opinion, all artists should consider that they won't be working for a corporate company such as Disney or Pixar. They need to really focus on teaching that aspect, and be blunt that many people will probably be freelancers as artists, or essentially become a starving artists. They tell you the rates and formulas but don't teach negotiation or people skills, project proposals, and important ways to get clients not be scared at looking at your rates. But they seem to strongly emphasize that people will move into some industry and apply to jobs through online web portals. Maria Brophy's free email newsletters teaches better shit than that class does, and probably would have gotten way more information if I just offered her a $100 for a simple phone call. My conclusion: forget this school, find a cheaper art school that gives you a basis. Get a degree if you must, but art in this day and age means = 1 part skill, 1 part sociability. Learn how to talk to people and present your art, and don't think that just having skill and talent will save you at the end of the day. Also, don't throw money at these for-profit art schools, give it to art instructors online who care.

Disclaimer: I am protected by The Leonard Law (CA Ed Code § 94367): Private postsecondary…read moreinstitutions in California cannot make or enforce rules subjecting students to discipline solely on the basis of speech that would be protected by the First Amendment or the California Constitution. This is my 4th semester. I have to say I have watched this school lose control of its curriculum and ALMOST LOSE its NAAB accreditation. This school online classes are seriously outdated. They do not have a full time staff where in my ending semesters where things are dense teachers prioritize their full time jobs over teaching. They do not instruct on advanced designing and MEP designing in the software they demand students use. Claiming "they are tools FOR US to learn how to use. We are in school paying $196,000, THEY SHOULD TEACH US. There are a handful of teachers that have made my time here worth it. They make it very hard for NON PRODOGIES to learn and be accepted. I have experienced over a dozen online reviews where it is disparaging and critical instead of elevating and lack of constructive feedback if the design is not to their standards. These reviews I found reflect a school that is taking advantage of tax incentives by being "inclusive". But thats for political reasons. They don't care if a student makes it or not. Iv watched hard working students breakdown and cry in reviews and even drop out because they just cant seem to appease the staff. Pro. inclusive admission process. Blah Cons: High tuition fees, often described as a "predatory" for-profit, with high dropout rates and high student debt. Reputation: The institution is frequently described as a "real estate empire" with extensive property ownership in San Francisco, which sometimes overshadows the educational focus. Experience: Some students report success if they are proactive with networking, while others report poor administrative communication.

UC Law - San Francisco - The quad is a popular outdoor space for law students to eat or study.

UC Law - San Francisco

(44 reviews)

Civic Center

My son is currently a student here and he is having an amazing experience! He lives in the new…read moreacademe198. It's a beautiful residence with many perks. It's right across the street from the school. He has learned so much in his first year and there was a lot of support available. He loves the people and the professors. The career center was very helpful in getting him an internship at the, San Francisco public defenders office. Internship is turning out to be fantastic. He's from LA but has had no trouble adapting to the school or San Francisco. In fact, he loves it. We're very happy with the whole experience!

I have mixed feelings about this one. On the one hand, they gave me a JD, I passed the bar with…read morewhat felt like ease, I didn't have to move away from my beloved Bay Area, I made some great friends there and did a lot of quality drinking. More importantly, I had a few great professors that I actually learned from because they had the magical combination of good teaching skills and the ability to inspire their students. However, they raised our tuition every year and took a whole building away from us - including our cafe and library - without making it up to us, it's basically in the Tenderloin and our ranking doesn't help the value of my degree. I think the high school atmosphere of law school is something that happens just about everywhere due to the relatively small size of the school, the drinking and more type-A personalities than you can shake a stick at. People contemplating graduate degrees often ask me if they should go to law school - I always say that it's like swimming through a sea of tar, but once you reach the hospitable shore that is your phatty attorney salary (and serving the public and the profession), it's gonna be SWEET.

California Institute of Integral Studies - Ikebana workshop!

California Institute of Integral Studies

(67 reviews)

SoMa

This review is for the Psychedelic Assisted Therapies and Research certificate program, which I…read morecompleted in 2024. Honestly, this was an overall, terrible experience. My original mentor blatantly and illegally discriminated against me due to my disability from the word go. First, I was provided with a complete run around in terms of where to send my letter of accommodation. It seemed that no one knew or cared how students should invoke ADA. Then, my mentor criticized and pathologized me for invoking ADA, as she said I was "othering" myself by doing so, and suggested I was "impaired" because I was surprised and upset about the difficulty I received in response to a very simple accommodation request. My mentor also spoke out of turn about me to the rest of my mentor group, and told me that the group wanted me to leave because I was "different". When I first reached out to admin to request reassignment to another group, I was told I should work alone for the duration of the program, rather than be moved to another group. Basically, I was being punished for invoking ADA. This was unacceptable, so I continued to advocate for myself. With the help of a peer and the Dean of Research and Innovation, after an unreasonable amount of back and forth, I was finally placed in a new mentor group. Also, a portion of my financial aid went missing. And, I was never paid for a "focus group" I participated in. Despite my efforts, no one got back to me about any of it. And, some of my financial paperwork included the information of another student, violating the other students privacy. And, on top of it all, in a Zoom with several admin, including Program Director Laura Pustarfi, all present managed to continually misgender me, despite my pronouns being very accessible and visible on my zoom screen. Every. Last. One. Of. Them. At. Every. Turn. The program itself was ok, might have been better if I didn't have to spend a good portion of it fighting for legal ADA accommodations. Funny, tho. My original mentor was fired from CIIS during the program. And, it wasn't for discrimination against me. Turns out she was involved in some other sketchy activities. Wild that the school went to such great lengths to protect her. Why am I not surprised? Basically, CIIS pays a lot of lip service to "diversity", but doesn't seem to care about justice, inclusion, or belonging. This was just my experience. Come to find out later on, a few other colleagues had their own experiences with the program and its admins. That said, I did learn a bit more about psychedelic assisted therapies and research, though the program wasn't as academically intense or experiential as I'd hoped. And, I had the opportunity to work through and create a protocol that will allow dissociative trauma survivors to safely access MDMA assisted psychotherapy. I also met some of the most amazing people who are now dear friends. Life goes on!

I attended the Human Sexuality program. I am both Iranian and Jewish, and I found the program to…read morepromote a particular political ideology regarding the Middle East, which felt more aligned with Marxist and socialist frameworks than with open academic inquiry. When we were assigned readings about Iran and I shared my personal experience as an Iranian, I felt shamed and dismissed. Rather than engaging in thoughtful dialogue, my perspective was shut down. In my experience, there was also a concerning lack of sensitivity around Jewish history and identity. I raised these concerns respectfully with the head of CIIS and requested that the instructor receive more education regarding Jewish and Iranian history. I also asked to remain anonymous. Unfortunately, I did not feel my confidentiality was protected, and I experienced what felt like retaliation from faculty afterward. If you hold lived experiences or perspectives that differ from the dominant ideology within this program, you may not feel supported in expressing them. In my experience, there was limited space for genuine academic debate or open conversation. If you are Iranian or Jewish, I suggest staying away from this program and school.

Willed Body Program - funeralservices - Updated May 2026

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