Hi StyleLeD,
I'll try responding as concisely as possible:
1. Gradcafe kind of hates SIPA. I saw that through last year as well It was in a way a reason to doubt my decision of coming here. But what we need to understand is that gradcafe has a subset of the accepted and admitted applicants. Anyway, to answer your questions
- Large core classes, well there is only one which is actually large (100+) which this the MPA/MIA core. And even there, these are guest lecture series classes. Your main work for this particular class happens in small discussion groups the week of the lecture with another professor/PhD student. These discussion groups have 15 people! The remaining classes vary from 10-50, depending on what you choose. Even the core Quant/Micro classes are split into multiple sections, with multiple professors. It's not so bad, and I doubt any other school has substantially smaller classes than SIPA.
- Our year, they increased funding for first years substantially. Yes, it's low, but is SIPA really lower than other schools? Don't know. SIPA gave me the most funding, that decided it for me. As for the reputation, I can't answer that, but SIPA is well known within the Columbia Community. Cash cow reputation is also hearsay (mostly from gradcafe) for me :)
- The career services are what you make of them, in any school actually. If you don't engage with them and don't attend their sessions, you won't see value in them! I've not attended many yet, but I've heard they are very useful when you have a potential interview/offer and you can practice with the team. And the portal is not too bad in my opinion, not great, yes, but not abysmal as I came in thinking they are.
- Absolute crap! Professors are amazing, very open to questions, you can catch them at any time. Even the legends.
2. In your first year at SIPA, try taking courses which are in line with your interest and open for TAships. You need to ace these courses, have a good working relationship with the Prof and TA and hope for the best! That's pretty much what anyone can do actually.
3. I have a mix of professional and academic courses, and I'm liking them so far. Honestly, you are completely free to choose what kind of courses you want to take up, you can also go the other extreme and take all electives and cores with choices as academic. But there is a catch, if you are not really interested in the mandatory core classes that you have to do, you may find a few classes in your first and second semester uninteresting and dry. Try mixing core and electives from the first semster itself. I did, and that makes it good! In fact, the course I thought I will hate has ended up being my favorite. Strange things happen.
4. Well, if you want to do management your previous point on not taking only professional courses doesn't add up But I don't know about either specialization, apologies! If it's useful, you can choose your specialization at any time till the end of your first (even second) semester. Audit classes. I've actually changed my specialization after coming here. You can also double-specialize, it's not uncommon.
5. Yep, you can take it as a pass/fail, or just audit the class through the semster. BUT this means you have a second language proof of proficiency and you can waive off the requirement (assuming you're MIA) and then take the course.
6. The group is amazing, diverse, sweet, and no ivy elitism as far as I can see. There is no divide between the first and second years either. The best part of SIPA is the peer group!
7. You'll find that I-House is not as exorbitant as if you start looking for apartments in NYC. NYC is ridiculously expensive, but you find ways to save. The rooms in I-House are tiny from what I hear, but the culture is amazing, I go there all the time (although I don't stay there)
You can PM me if you like, and we can discuss more over email.