EIDUS.SG Europe Part 2: Cambridge vs. Stanford

Europe Part 2: Cambridge vs. Stanford

Posted in Education, World on Saturday, August 8th, 2009 at 2:29 pm No Comments

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Source: The Independent, UK

I lived for a few days in Cambridge University, visiting many of the Singaporeans there. One of the world’s oldest universities, its halls were once graced by greats such as Newton, Marlowe and so many other legends. It is a charming town full of tradition with little shophouses and narrow, winding streets; and you can hire punts (little gondola-like boats) to float down Cambridge river.

Cambridge is actually not one university but a collection of smaller “colleges” with names like Jesus and Trinity, each with its own little castle guarded by porters (a romanticized version of a security guard cum receptionist), and having the autonomy to name its own school fees, and choose its own students. As a result the Cambridge experience varies from student to student, largely dependent on which college they are in.

Academically, students from Cambridge are admitted solely based on academic achievement, and choose their subject before they enter college. Moreover, places in popular subjects (economics, for example) are limited and one must score above a certain score to be able to do a subject of their choice. Double-majors are rare and there are no such things as minors, thus most students only do one subject for the three years they are in college.

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The bar at the May Ball

I was fortunate to be able to attend Magdalene’s (a dorm in Cambridge) May Ball, one of their extravagant end of year celebrations (the one I attended was featured in TIME Magazine). It was an extravagant orgy of free-flow champagne, delicacies and various activities. Magdalene’s attractions included a mini-golf course, shisha tents, a rifle range and unlimited jelly beans (my favourite). Another college (Trinity) had their own fireworks display, while I heard that a few years ago another college flew everyone over by hot air balloon to Paris for breakfast. The dress code for most May Balls was white-tie; I had to spend almost 2 hours learning how to put my suit on from a video on Youtube.

Cambridge is about as different from Stanford as I can imagine- I’ll write more about this later on.

Related posts:

  1. Europe Trip Part 3: Cambridge vs. Stanford
  2. Europe Part 1: Iceland
  3. What to study?
  4. Stanford Academics

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  • Europe Part 2: Cambridge vs. Stanford
  • Europe Part 2: Cambridge vs. Stanford
  • Europe Part 2: Cambridge vs. Stanford
  • Europe Part 2: Cambridge vs. Stanford

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