We asked Alexandria...
What are the academics like at your school?
Cornell students party hard and study hard. You see the little heads crowing down in the common study area right before the big prelims. Most intro classes are very big with the professor standing in the front of the hall. If you want to know them personally, you have to take the initiative of approaching them during their office hours.(trust me, it will pay off in the long run). I have actually become friends with one of my professors and we still keep in touch after I finished his class.Also, remember to make friends with TA's though most TA's at Cornell don’t really speak English that well. Be nice and polite to your TA's since they are the ones grading your paper and assignments. For upper-level classes, the classes are much smaller and there is a more dynamic interaction between the students and the professor. The workload really depends on your major, expectation and efficiency. I have engineer friends who sleep 5 hours a night and study in the library all the time. On the other extreme end, one of my floormates who is also an engineer plays Guitar Hero almost non-stop in his room.I have never seen him flipping through his book. In general, the students in artsy majors tend to lead a less stressful life than the ones in hard-core science majors. The students are very competitve here since most of them graduated as the top 5% from their highschools. Also, the grades are often belt-curved so you just need to do better than everyone else to get a good grade. Surprisingly enough, I have actually found the workload here lighter than my highschool workload. THere are not too many projects and you just need to ace the prelims. I have heard the friends from math department say that in general, education at Cornell is geared more toward theoretical studies instead of real life application. One thing I would argue though is the classes in AEM ( the special undergraduate business program) is all about developing a business mind-set.
The two classes you must take here is Professor Moss’s Psych 101 and the wine-tasting class.Professor Moss is one of those ancient wisards who have been teaching at Cornell forever. His class at Bailey Hall is always full and he always tells everyone that he would retire the next year. The wine-tasting class isn't a piece of cake, from what I have heard. You actually have to distinguish the differences between the grapes from different origins. And the most "interesting" class is this class devoted to pornography. I have no idea what they do in that class.