Academics
Located in Bloomington, Illinois Wesleyan University is a community that “invites you to make the most of your education and is ready to bend over backwards to ensure you enjoy your experience.” Though the school doesn’t have that big of a reputation outside the Midwest “despite its excellent education,” it is an underrated gem that is “always trying to give students opportunities that are beyond what most schools can give.” It truly is “a small school that oozes big opportunities.”
Professors are “brilliant and accessible” “insightful” individuals who are “the best in their field.” “The exuberance they have for their subject area and their students is very evident.” Many of them are involved in research and “often include students in helping them,” while others are involved in other ways; for example, “the [former] mayor of Bloomington is also a political science professor—how cool is that!” “There have been a few life-changing professors who I am so grateful to have taken their class,” says a business administration major.
Facilities and the career center are excellent, there are numerous opportunities for community engagement and research, and “there are so many resources and programs that help students who are seeking any type of support, whether it be academic, moral, or health.” Wesleyan also “does a great job getting students ready for graduate school,” and faculty “put [a lot of] effort into the information being taught, and really try and relate it to real life.”
The school has a reputation for “overinvolved students who travel abroad, are the president of three clubs, and still maintain excellent grades.” “IWU pushes us to excel academically while encouraging us to pursue our passions outside of our schoolwork,” says a student. Overall, IWU is “a friendly community where your professors become mentors, your classmates become lifelong friends, and you graduate prepared to make a real difference in the world.”
Student Body
The typical Wesleyan student “has a major that they take great pride in studying” and “often compare workloads to bond.” Students here are “very academically focused” (“it’s very rare to find students who don’t try”) but are also aware that “having a social life is important as well.” Almost everyone is “very liberal and rather artistic” and “very involved with many different activities.” While there are noticeable groups such as “athletes, Greek life, and theater kids” which mainly stick together, “everyone has friends in other departments and organizations.” There is “lots of competition on campus for internships and research opportunities,” but “everyone is very helpful when it comes to informing others of opportunities.” A “large percentage” of the campus is Greek life-affiliated.
Campus Life
As with many colleges, there’s a strong weekday-weekend divide: “There is a fair trade of work and play.” Sunday through Wednesday nights, “people are studying, going to meetings for clubs, maybe going to an event or two,” but come the weekend, students “will go to parties at fraternity houses or off-campus houses, or go to the bars.” BloomingtonNormal also has a variety of “great restaurants” and shopping venues which “are fun places to go to on the weekends,” and neighboring ISU offers “some of that big college town culture [that] can be found in the area.”
The Office of Student Activities “does a great job having entertainment available for students” and almost every weekend a free event is held in the student center, “whether that be a concert, comedian, movie, or other entertainment.” There is a “plethora of study groups” (“People are very receptive to getting work done together”), “great opportunities for intellectual discussions” at the coffee shop, and “students are always in food areas discussing, reading, or doing homework.” “We have a weird obsession with the Game Show network as well here,” confesses a student. “Buncha dorks. We know it and we own it!”