Zara
New member
- Joined
- Feb 20, 2026
- Messages
- 22
I'm a junior at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, and the biggest question I get is: "What's the difference between Cal Poly and a regular UC?" The answer is simple: "Learn by doing." It's not just a slogan—it's actually how classes work.
Hands-on from day one. In my engineering classes, we're not just solving textbook problems. We're building things. My freshman year, we built a working bridge. Not a model—a real bridge. That's normal here.
Class size is smaller. Cal Poly doesn't have the huge lecture halls of the UCs. My biggest class had 50 people. Most are smaller. You actually talk to professors.
The campus is stunning. SLO is this beautiful town between LA and San Francisco. Hills, vineyards, the ocean 15 minutes away. The weather is basically perfect. Hiking before class is a real possibility.
The majors are focused. Cal Poly is known for engineering, architecture, agriculture, and business. If you want those things, this is one of the best places in the state. If you want humanities, maybe look elsewhere.
The social scene is outdoorsy. Not a huge party school vibe. People hike, surf, go to the beach, hang at farmers market (which is amazing here). It's a different kind of college experience.
It's competitive to get in. Like, really competitive. But if you want a practical, hands-on education in a beautiful setting, it's worth the effort.
Any other Mustangs here?
Hands-on from day one. In my engineering classes, we're not just solving textbook problems. We're building things. My freshman year, we built a working bridge. Not a model—a real bridge. That's normal here.
Class size is smaller. Cal Poly doesn't have the huge lecture halls of the UCs. My biggest class had 50 people. Most are smaller. You actually talk to professors.
The campus is stunning. SLO is this beautiful town between LA and San Francisco. Hills, vineyards, the ocean 15 minutes away. The weather is basically perfect. Hiking before class is a real possibility.
The majors are focused. Cal Poly is known for engineering, architecture, agriculture, and business. If you want those things, this is one of the best places in the state. If you want humanities, maybe look elsewhere.
The social scene is outdoorsy. Not a huge party school vibe. People hike, surf, go to the beach, hang at farmers market (which is amazing here). It's a different kind of college experience.
It's competitive to get in. Like, really competitive. But if you want a practical, hands-on education in a beautiful setting, it's worth the effort.
Any other Mustangs here?