Master of Economics at UNI:
Master of Economics at UNI:
Management for public and private health facilities.
Great!!!
Master of Economics at UNI:
Management for public and private health facilities.
Great!!!
It boasts a cutting-edge educational offer and high-level scientific research. In the first places in Italy in various international rankings.
I used to come here with my sister before she got her master's degree in law. According to the people I know who have attended this faculty, they have had a great experience. The campus is well organized.
Eduroam doesn't work. Great! It has 2 points because it is very beautiful
Without a doubt there are great professors who love their job. However, UNITED is also bureaucratically formative. If you survive the misinformation / misinformation of the secretariats, departments and faculties, know that nothing can stop you in real life!
Harmonious and secluded palace, although overlooking Via Po. The rectorate is located there and very interesting exhibitions are organized on the most varied themes (Great War, asbestos). Study rooms available to students.
excellent training offer, ineffective website and impossible telephone answering in general channels, unnecessary waiting times and automatic voice logs
My best friend did his masters here so I went to visit him while he was in Turin. He took me round the university. Of course, I can only comment on the buildings and scenery, not on its academic virtues, but he passed his degree and enjoyed studying here.He would give it five stas, I'm sure.
My vote is for the Martha Cooper exhibition during the Sotto18 festival, the most historic shots of this iconic photojournalist are present in the courtyard. Going up to the first floor, the rest of the most recent photos are in the library. Exciting.
I am enrolled at the University of Turin as a non-attending student. If you are thinking about it, forget it. Throw in the towel, enroll in the popular university where they are most organized, enroll in an online course provided by Coursera or those for them, where there is no lack of passion. I am in line with the exams, I have a good average, I jump through hoops because I live and work in another city. I don't want to be privileged for this, but I don't want to be penalized either.
In these three years the university has represented a constant struggle for everything: studying is a right, but university bureaucracy is a struggle. Yes, I know, it is something we hear too much: but it is true! Let me say that, as a worker in contact with people, if I did my job as the secretariat or most professors do (we talk about the language center) I would be fired in no time. There are some very good professors, who follow you, encourage you, appreciate the transversal and collateral interest in the matter. Remove those two, there are all the others. Unwilling, unable to reply to an email except with a "must contact the secretariat" or "is not my responsibility". Living the University of Turin, especially as a non-attending student, is not a challenge, it is a fight to the death. The secretariat is managed by who it is not clear who, there is only one person able to solve the problems (great lady Anna I will never thank you enough) while the others seem to be put there by chance, as if one day they had taken 10 people on the street and asked them "can you answer the phone?" and they said no. The professionalism of some professors is lost in smallness, disorganized at levels which frightens me the idea that they are the ones who have to train us. I don't know where I will find the strength to continue and take this degree: with me this university has failed on all fronts.
For me it is worth 5 stars because my partner has had a liver transplant in the covid boom. Professor Romagnoli, Doctor Mirabela is Doctor Wolf with all the staff of the semi-intensive are trained people and at the human nivelo bravisimi.
Good university with good level courses and a great story behind it. To review the organization
Well I'm yet to be admitted,hoping to also get to see and hear all this for myself....but currently i think i love the way they reply their emails..very friendly....hoping to be admitted
I can say nothing about education here, but as a tourist a can say that this is very beautiful place, monuments, columns... amazing...
I had the chance to study but I had to give up, now I regret this decision. I advise anyone not to do as the undersigned, whatever the possibilities, the remedies are found. Continue to study, it is your life and your future, take the opportunity.
Unfortunately we are still a long way off to say that compulsory school and university work well, as they should ...
The Castello del Valentino is a historic building in Turin located in the anonymous Valentino Park on the banks of the Po and a World Heritage Site as part of the UNESCO site, Residenze Sabaude. Purchased as a hunting lodge by the Duke Emanuele Filiberto di Savoia, who began the transformation works, passed, upon his death, to the heir Carlo Emanuele I, then husband of Catherine of Austria.
With the marriage of his son Vittorio Amedeo I of Savoy, Carlo Emanuele I gifted the castle to his daughter-in-law Maria Cristina of Bourbon, daughter of the King of France Henry IV. Upon the death of her husband, who had become regent of the Duchy, first Madama Reale, she took care of the transformation of the dwelling which assumed its present form on a project by Carlo and Amedeo Castellamonte. After various vicissitudes and an important transformation in the 19th in anticipation of the VI National Exhibition of Products for Industry. Finally, in 1869, it became the official headquarters of the Royal Application School for Engineers and today it is owned by the Polytechnic of Turin and hosts the degree courses in Architecture.
The building is characterized by a PT hall, called Sala delle Colonne which receives the entrance halls on the Po side, when the main facade was the one which became secondary after the transformation of the building in conjunction with the exhibition. At the exit, on the city side, of this room, two symmetrical staircases lead to the 1st floor to the two apartments that depart from the central party room: the golden apartment facing south occupied by Madama Reale, the white apartment facing north occupied by her husband.
The golden apartment consists of 5 rooms: "Verde", "Delle Rose", "Dello Zodiaco", "Della Nascita dei Fiori", "Dei Gigli" and "Dal Gabinetto dei Fiori Indorato".
The white apartment, also consists of 5 rooms, namely: "Della Guerra", "Del Mercato", "Delle Magnificenze", "Della Caccia", "Delle Feste" and finally "Il Gabinetto delle Fatiche d'Ercole. All the rooms in the Madama Reale apartment are full of floral and alchemical frescoes, while the Duke's lawsuits are full of really beautiful and interesting stuccos.I believe that this house deserves even more than one visit to better understand its beauty.
torino university offers a very advanced teaching and scientific research of a high standard. Various international rankings are the first places in Italy.
Beautiful building with beautiful decoration and busts of important people for the university. Due to the Corona infection, there was no activity during the days we were in town.
Established in 1404. It grew a lot in the 1800s, becoming one of the most prestigious in Italy. It currently offers a large number of degree courses. 4 Centers of Excellence in Research are active, funded and recognized by the Ministry of Research. It's a great university.
Could you guys help me? I can't understand if the psychology faculty is online or not ... help
5 stars for trust
Although I have not chosen her for my children, I must recognize her as a leader in Italy. Not so much for the university itself, but for the integration and the services that the Municipality has been able to create around us.
The structure is not great and the organization leaves something to be desired
Here is the rectorate of the University of Turin. Palace designed by Michelangelo Garove, Torinese architect in the last decade of the seventeenth century. On the sides of the courtyard there are the wide access stairs to the main floor. Very nice and well kept.
I have never seen a faculty more disorganized and more confused than this. Fortunately I only attended the two years of masterly.
International student? yeah stay away from this University. They are very disorganised which makes life a lot harder for you, and when you try to contact them they do not even bother to respond.
It was my university therefore, I can only speak well of it, since the conditions and the structure improve from year to year.
Here the students who go to university should say something ........,. I abstain.
The University Palace is an eighteenth-century building in Turin and stands on the block between Via Verdi and via Po.
It was built at the behest of Vittorio Amedeo II of Savoy who at the beginning of the 18th century planned a major reform of the University of Turin. The project was by Michelangelo Garove, who delivered it in 1713, the year of his death, and then the Genoese architect Giovanni Antonio Ricca il Vecchio was entrusted with the execution, who built the portico and loggia courtyard, unlike the Garove project , which provided for blind arches. The construction of the building was completed in 1720 and the inauguration took place on November 7 of that year.
Between 1715 and 1726, Filippo Juvarra, author of the brick facade facing via Verdi, contributed to the palace, while the one on via Po is uniform with respect to the other buildings of the historic street.
The most spectacular element of the building is the internal courtyard with double porch. Of particular value is also the neoclassical entrance portal on Via Verdi, a 1834 work by Giuseppe Talucchi.
Since its construction it has been the seat of the University of Turin.
Today it houses its offices, the headquarters of the Rectorate and is also home to some faculties of the University of Turin.
Did my degree couple years back and moved away from the country but really do miss this place. Good memories good vibes and the scenery. Good university would definitely recommend.
Very good and very kind. Unfortunately, the restrictions for COVID have led to a drastic reduction in staff and the remaining sleep overwhelmed by work.
An excellent university. I attended law school for 5 years, prepared teachers and well-organized campuses.
Beautiful building in the center of Turin overlooking Via Po
What an incredible emotion to discover the upstairs plaque with the names of professors and professors ousted by the racial laws: placed there a few months ago, in this 2019, it was really a sign. It seems like the ideal place to study. You breathe culture.
Services not top comparing them to university tuition .... but we are in Italy more can not be expected! Or foresight ??
Turin University Building where the offices, the Arturo Graf Library and the Historical Archive of the University of Turin are located, a wonderful place where annals, lecture registers and personal files of the professors are kept.
The building was built in the first twenty years of the eighteenth century and Michelangelo Garove, Giovanni Antonio Ricca and Filippo Juvarra worked on the project. The central element of the plexus is the internal courtyard with a square plan, around which there are two floors of loggias. The entrance on via Po merges with the other buildings, while the opposite one on via Verdi is in neoclassical style.
Humanities Faculties: if you intend to use your best years seriously to acquire a high level education, change universities.
Very well organized hospital with large spaces inside and large free parking outside. The doctors to whom I turned are very good, the staff from nurses to those who do the cleaning very polite.
Non-existent assistance.
Disorganization on the agenda.
University not worthy of being called such.
NOT RECOMMEND!
Exam for Prefit II
Psychology of the affective and relational aspects of the management of the class group.
26 May 2018
Arrival at the parking at 7.45. Arrival in front of room 32 for identification at 7.55 am. Dozens of people wait in front of a desk with a box with the word PREFIT II on it; an assistant speaks without a microphone to a non-silent audience.
After 8.10 the identifications begin, late. The methods of identification are explained, "hoping" that everyone hears.
We are identified and there are 100 of us in the classroom at 9.20 (one hour and 10 minutes to identify 100 people or a little less).
4 people had problems with the registration, so you have to keep waiting.
At 9.30 the assistants begin the explanation of the examination procedures.
Only at this moment is it said: "you can only hand in the tests at the end of the 60 minutes". So in case someone finished the test in 30 minutes they would have to wait 30 minutes looking into space.
This communication has not perhaps caused any inconvenience to those who have had registration problems, but to those who have behaved according to the rules, registering on time and arriving on time, yes. Since the exam started at 9.40 and I, having parked at 7.45, paid for a parking meter until 10.37 (2 hours and 52 minutes), ending the exam at 10.40, I could have been fined because of the parking area.
After finishing my test, I think about these topics and I realize my parking delay.
I go to the assistant and report the matter. She says I MUST drop out if I want to get out of the classroom. I MUST sign the withdrawal. I would not like to sign a retreat since I took the exam, but I have to sign, otherwise I can't go away. They can't return my phone to me if I don't sign the pickup. For me it is a signature extorted, but I am not a jurist, maybe I am wrong.
While I sign, the assistant smilingly tells me "I would have risked a fine in his place". I believe that in an educational environment such as the university one it is not a good idea to recommend a bad civic attitude. But maybe I'm wrong.
So I communicate that I will make a complaint. I am then invited to speak with the two teachers. I would like to speak with them outside the classroom so as not to disturb colleagues, but they prefer to speak in the classroom.
I begin to explain my reasons, but after a short time they interrupt me and, urging me to raise their voice, they say that in class they had communicated the possibility of such inconveniences. I try to explain that I am not attending, that I have the right to receive information of this type in another way, but they do not care.
Once I understand that the teachers of the psychology exam "of the affective and relational aspects of managing the class group" have no intention of LISTEN, I say "I would like to leave"; they answer almost in unison "Here, go!".
I think an exam for 100 people could have been better organized. Because even though the course was for 1000 people, it was divided into classes of 100. And for every 100 people there were 3 assistants. (I can be wrong with these numbers, I do not know the organization of the other classes but I suppose ours was not privileged since it was one of the last to start the exam).
I have taken more than 30 written exams at the University of Turin and I have never found myself in organizational conditions of this type.
My advice is to review these processes.
I admit that I could be wrong, and that perhaps the organization of this exam was impeccable. Maybe I'm the one who should have paid a 12-hour parking meter. Perhaps online communication is overrated and you should go back to paper.
I apologize for the outburst and wish you a good day.
Luca
It is still the most elegant building of all those of Turin's universities