<p>My son will be attending Fairleigh Dickinson University, in Madison NJ, in the fall. He will be on the “Florham” campus, which is mostly residential, while its twin “Metropolitan” campus in Teaneck is more commuter. The vast majority of students at this small liberal arts school are from NJ, with sizeable minorities from NY, PA, CT, and DE. My son has so far met one student each from VT, MD, TX, CO, and India, and we’re told he’s the only incoming freshman from CA (although there are 3 or 4 others in the other classes). FDU states its mission as one of “Global Education” and has a required core of 4 courses dealing with various aspects of global culture, history, and understanding. There is an online distance-learning component of these core courses.</p>
<p>FDU Florham is a gorgeous bucolic leafy green campus with mostly brick buildings, on the grounds of a former Vanderbilt mansion. Founded in 1942, it is known for its business and education schools (especially its MBA program) and psychology department, but also has an exciting animation and graphic design department which intrigued my son. It is also known for its Regional Center for Students with Disabilities. FDU has a campus in Wroxton, England, which offers study abroad, and has just opened another campus in Vancouver, BC. There is a flourishing Honors program, and four special Florham Scholars programs (in Art & Humanities, Global Studies, Business, and Science: my son will be in the Art & Humanities program, where they will go into NYC as a group monthly for visits to galleries and meet-ups with the artists, visits to musical or theatrical performances and meet-ups with the musicians or directors, etc.). There are about 2400 students on the Florham campus, which is a quick 30-min. train ride into NYC (there is a rail stop at the edge of campus), with about twice as many students at the Metropolitan campus; from what we can tell the campuses are pretty independent. The proximity to NYC allows excursions into the City for cultural and other learning, and allows interactions on campus with many UN delegates who regularly visit campus. Students are invited to sign up for talks and dinners with UN representatives who visit campus; these talks/dinners are held in a former ballroom in The Mansion. We were told that the NY Giants train on the grounds and in the athletic center during the summer.</p>
<p>Drew University and the College of St. Elizabeth are both within a mile of FDU Florham (St. Elizabeth shares a border). FDU has both Division III (Florham) and Division I (Metropolitan) sports teams. Applying before Jan. 15th and including two letters of recommendation put applicants in the running for a large pool of merit aid. My son was invited to Scholar’s Day in early March and afterwards offered a very large merit award. He’s received phonecalls from his dept chair, personalized mailings from the Admissions Office, and emails from faculty and students: all interactions he’s had from afar or in person have been warm, welcoming, and very positive. He signed up for his classes last week at a 2-day orientation, and in a move that I would not have thought likely, he tried to sign up for too MANY classes and had to be talked out of some of them this semester. :)</p>
<p>We know people who’ve attended FDU and are happy people with fabulous careers. I can’t comment on his education there yet, but I <em>can</em> assure you he is really excited about moving out there in 6 short weeks. From what I can tell, FDU is a sleeping gem that will offer the right student a supportive environment with lots of opportunities, and likely some pretty nice merit money, too. Tuition next year will be $27,620, plus room/board for residential students. (With scholarship, the cost for us will be below that of a UC school in-state.)</p>
<p><a href=“http://www.fdu.edu%5B/url%5D”>www.fdu.edu</a></p>