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May 2025 by JC Wilson
It is a Midwest dining commons…it’s not great but it’s not horrible by any stretch
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September 2024 by Oliver Baronick
Filled with roaches and flies. It got shut down for roaches last year and now it is worse you get roach food or no food. They don’t have half of the options they say.
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August 2023 by Marianna K.
Very clean , very green , very beautiful . Nice place for young students. Staff was very friendly
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April 2023 by Linda R.
Taylor University, a Christ-centered higher educational institution. One u can count on. Small town, with lots of charm. People who care and care about your student. Very high academic standards with all the extra curriculum you need. Go see and be impressed. We've been!!!
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March 2023 by Mike K.
We sent our daughter to this university and it was an absolute miracle. She majored in History, minored in English, and now has a great career in information services thanks to this awesome, Christ-driven, 100% safe space of a school!
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January 2023 by Taylor B.
A 100% safe school for students looking for a top notch education without it being watered down by some woke nonsense. You'll graduate feeling good about what you learned, not what pronouns classmates called you. A true blessing of a university.
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January 2019 by Jacob T
Sometimes in a small town you need a change. This is an excellent quick service drop but the price keeps you from going more often.
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August 2018 by kek604
Admission Dept. did a great job showing us the campus, interviewing our students, and connecting with faculty - even though the university was not yet in session. Taylor University is a gem in a small Indiana town.
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August 2018 by DMJA21
Taylor is located on the south side of Upland. It is one of the oldest evangelical schools in the US having been established in 1846. The campus of 950 acres feels large for the number of facilities and 2500 students. If you are in town to check out Ivanhoe’s or following the Garfield Trail, it’s worth your while to drive a few blocks down the street to see Taylor.
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May 2018 by Kristin M
I like Taylor. It's a great golf course. Excellent fish market. Good have had better service, no one carried my bag for me. Disappointing. But still good.
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November 2017 by Conor O.
I spent four years here and it wasn't enough. I love this place and I will never forget it. Not to mention the stellar education I relieved while I was there. I have always felt prepared for my industry (film and media production) and I attribute that to my professors and their amazing heart for education. This place is unlike any other and I was blessed to call it home.
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August 2017 by MangoLove
This university is a hidden gem in Upland. It is much larger as a campus than I expected. The buildings are full of history and are all named after important people. The facilities themselves are all modern. There is a Chick Fil-A open year round in the commons, and other food facilities during the school year. The staff were all friendly and helpful. This is well worth a stop off the beaten path.
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January 2016 by Mary H.
I am the Mother of a student that attended this school. I couldn't say enough great things about Taylor. My daughter did an extensive search for a school that she wanted to attend. Taylor met her needs and wants and then some. We're from the west coast and she fell in love with the mid west, Taylor specifically. Taylor was the perfect size, high academics, the right courses/ degrees offered, small groups, churches in the area, fellowship, worship and awesome young adults that she's made lifelong friends with. I never worried about her while she attended Taylor University.
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April 2011 by Josh H.
When I first visited, I had a great experience... years later - it was undoubtedly 4 of the best years of my life. For me, the more I put in, the more I got out. It's a small school in rural Indiana, that competes quite well with big schools in big cities. The faculty truly cares about the success of students and being a student is a ton of fun and hard work. Enough about my feelings, what was I looking for when I was in high school? Are my test scores good enough? - Taylor's competitive to get into. My scores weren't as high as my peers', but my admission letter contributed a lot of value. What's the job placement like? - I keep up regularly with classmates. Some of the companies/grad schools they are at include: Google, Microsoft, Ernst & Young, McKinsey Consulting, Amazon, Accenture, Edward Jones, Chase Bank, Pixar, Sentry Data Systems, Blue Cross Blue Shield, Harvard University, Carnegie Mellon, Red Hat, Intel, GE, Chic Fil A, Lockheed Martin, Boeing, Raytheon, and Mayo Clinic. - Elementary Ed is very strong - Some classmates didn't want to go into the industry and taught english overseas, joined the peace corps, went on for an Masters of Div, etc. - Some classmates started their own companies in San Fran and are doing really well No alcohol? Strict rules? - We made our own fun. - Sometimes having rules makes it more fun ;D Why does everybody talk about 'community'? - I work in Chicago, so I experience the "headphones-in avoid others mentality" every single day. Taylor is the opposite. - Invert high school: in high school, differences result in being outcasted. While I was at Taylor, my differences seemed to make me more interesting to others. Is Chapel mandatory? - No, I missed chapel sometimes because I had committed to so many campus events, but when I went I found Chapel worship to be incredible. How can I afford this? - Use fafsa, student loans - Apply for scholarships - Pray (originally I said this jokingly, but seriously, pray about it) How hard is it? - Some majors are harder than others, its like taking 3-4 AP classes a semester - Classmates I saw in study rooms more than others: Engineering, Physics, Math, Comp Sci, Comp Eng, Chem, Bio, Pre-Med, Finance, Accounting, Elementary Ed What are the semesters like? - I think the max credit hour load is 17... that was when I was there though. - Most classes are 3-4 credit hours. - Classes with 5 credit hours typically involve a lab session. - Classes 1-2 hours are typically seminar or capstone classes. - Minimum is 12 hours to be on campus full time. What are "gen-eds"? - Everybody has to take a core set of classes - Some art, english, math/foreign language depending on if you go BA or BS - Religion classes - to this day I look back on my notes from Historic and Contemporary Christian Belief Can I study abroad? - Yes. - You will need to pay for tickets to go there and back. - A few I knew best were a semester in Ireland, j-term in greece/italy, j-term in China Where to go for fun? - Lots of campus events: Nostalgia Night, My Gen Night, Airband, Taylathon, Ice Cream Socials, Holipalooza, SIlent Night, Outdoor movie fests - Muncie or Marion (half hour) - Indy (hour) Greek life? - Wings and Floors have deep rooted traditions and subcultures - Some healthy loyalty and rivalry exists between these groups - Examples include: foundation, SIIS, broho, penthouse, 2nd west, 3rd east, 3rd center, Foso, bhone Tips: - Save all your work, I reference my old work from college often - Try before you buy, go for an "overnight" stay. I did this and loved it.
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February 2009 by Eric M.
I'm a little amazed (disappointed?) that I'm the first to review my alma mater on Yelp. And just for good measure, it's my 100th review on here, too. Taylor is a small, non-denominational, protestant Christian liberal arts college in Indiana. This review is for their main campus in tiny-town Upland, Indiana. I grew up on the West Coast, but chose to go to Taylor because I grew up in an even tinier town and wasn't ready for anything resembling a Big City (of course now I live in downtown Chicago, so times have changed). Taylor provided a warm, comforting environment, and an balanced emphasis on academics and Christian service. From the perspective of this alum, it has at times emphasized its Christian roots above academic rigor, but it seems to be resuming an emphasis on academic rigor in recent years. Loke most colleges, it also offers several "semesters away" programs in different parts of the world - domestically and internationally. I spent a semester in Chicago, for example. Like most Christian colleges, it requires students to agree to fairly strict behavioral guidelines, what it calls its "Life Together Covenant." It treats the LTC seriously, and faculty are held to it, too. It's one of those things you just have to accept going in, whether you really believe it's a good thing or not. Taylor may be best known for molding teachers, but its other departments are reasonably solid, too. Many of the computer science graduates I know are doing quite well in their fields. In fact, most (though not all) Taylor grads seem to land on their feet. In my experience, outside of Indiana and a few small circles in Chicago, Taylor doesn't have the resources to open doors or help with career networking. However for people scrappy enough to open their own doors, the education is solid enough to see you through. Taylor does well in US News and World Report rankings - for 2009 US News ranks them #1 for Midwestern Regional baccalaureate colleges, partly through being good, and partly by being good at playing the numbers game. As comparison for what that might mean, the US Air Force Academy was #1 for the West region, Cooper Union was #1 for the North region, and Ouachita Baptist University (yeah, I've never heard of them either) was #1 for the South region. In comparison, Wheaton College and Gordon College, two Christian schools that Taylor would like to consider competition, are ranked in the national category of Liberal Arts Colleges, with Wheaton listed at a respectable 56 and Gordon in the third tier for nationally-ranked schools. All in all, if you like small towns, value Christian faith far above all else, need a little more time to grow while in a protective environment, don't expect to need to live outside of Indiana or, at furthest, Illinois, Ohio or Michigan, or just want to go to a small Christian college in a tiny town 30 minutes from a town of any real size (which would be Muncie, home of Ball State, David Letterman's alma mater), Taylor's a great choice. If, however, you know you'll need a college with more resources at the national and international level, or you prefer a college in a location where you have ready access to things of national or even international importance, or you don't want to have to play by conservative Christian rules while you're in college, you will be more comfortable choosing somewhere else.