Meet Sarah
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I'm a sophomore at the University of Scranton, and I'm a nursing major. Um, what is your favorite part about grand? Um, I think definitely the campus and also within my major, how much? All the professor's care and how organized everything is. The food's good talk a little bit more about your major like, what do you like about it? How is it is a difficult, like, personally? Well, I'm only a sophomore, so it hasn't gotten really bad yet. Um, I know it's going to get worse, but it's the good kind of bad, like it's stuff that we enjoy studying his nurses, So But yeah, I can't stress how organized everything is. I don't know how else to describe it, really, but all the professors air on the same track with everything and our because it's a small campus in a relatively small program. They're aware of everything that's going on in every class and I don't know. I feel like they are actually teaching us what we have to know. The best part is that they care about how what we do, I guess which is good. Um, what's your least favorite part about grand? These here are probably the location. Yeah, City, it's so No, I'm from upstate New York, and I love it there. I just feel like it's kind of dreary and like dark. It's like that in Syracuse, too, but two different. So something about here's just a little more doll that has to do in the city. On the campus itself is like this little gem within the city is grand like the campus is so nice. The city itself was just kind of said, There's a good coffee shop downtown, and that's really the only reason it leave. Um, describe what you take us like the student body and like the overall feeling of Scranton, it's definitely not very diverse. I remember looking at Villanova and thinking that was too happy, so I thought this was like a step down? No. But also, I'm used to because that's how my high school was. I feel like there's not like a huge range of different students here. Yeah, exactly like the person I know from farthest aways from Illinois. I'm really one of the only people I know from upstate New York. It's a little disappointing because I really want to meet people from all over. So could you explain how that has worked for you? What, you d'oh just how? No. Yeah, um, so ROTC it's a lot. It's not at the same time, I think compared Teo Diversity sports. It's a piece of cake because university sports, they practice like two or three times a day. Sometimes ROTC. It's five times a week. It's a lot more army stuff than people expect of us, I guess. They saw pictures to some of the stuff we're doing like, Well, there's a gorge near here and we go on a one rope bridge across it way. Go do this field training exercise and we just sleep in the woods way, repel off cliffs and stuff. I feel like a lot of people on campus don't know that we actually do that stuff. I feel like they think we just wear the uniforms and go to classes and then carve ourselves part of the Army. Now we do a lot of training, and it's even more than I expected. Yeah, I think it for the most part, it helps shape the students that are a part of it helps us. Manager time helps us become disciplined with her time. It definitely helps some of the students that would be struggling. I'm actually going to branch into the nursing corps. Hopefully after it works really well for nurses if I'm being honest because all the other majors, like, say, your history major is something you're not going to be doing history, necessarily in the army, you'll branch, something like infantry or military intelligence. Nursing is the only major where you will go into the army as a nurse on. Hey, we're always looking for people. They're always like trying to recruit nurses into the nursing course.