QUOTE(lolzcalvin @ Jan 13 2016, 09:38 PM)
Go with kumiko_91's suggestion. I'm still in APU, and for around 2 years now, APU cretainly has benefits and flaws on its both sides. I will not say "APU isn't a good option" based on my experience, and I will definitely NOT say that APU is the best concerning I've never been in any other universities before and it'll be shame if I make blind comparisons that're merely based on my "beliefs".
Plenty of Microsoft top software suites for free are available since APU has license under Microsoft Dreamspark including the top-tier IDE (Visual Studio 2015 Enterprise Edition) for your C, C++, VB.Net, C#... I've met a few lecturers who really couldn't teach, but some are good lecturers as long as you pay attention on their lectures and do distributed works during lab/tutorial sessions. Keyword is "pay attention", develop a habit to take notes, otherwise when you can't catch up the course you may, end up blaming APU for your possible mistakes. And yes, full dependencies on lecturers and expect them to deliver everything are not the way to succeed, even my Java lecturer advised us that.
what makes you chose APU?Plenty of Microsoft top software suites for free are available since APU has license under Microsoft Dreamspark including the top-tier IDE (Visual Studio 2015 Enterprise Edition) for your C, C++, VB.Net, C#... I've met a few lecturers who really couldn't teach, but some are good lecturers as long as you pay attention on their lectures and do distributed works during lab/tutorial sessions. Keyword is "pay attention", develop a habit to take notes, otherwise when you can't catch up the course you may, end up blaming APU for your possible mistakes. And yes, full dependencies on lecturers and expect them to deliver everything are not the way to succeed, even my Java lecturer advised us that.
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Jan 13 2016, 11:00 PM

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