Truett-McConnell University
School info
3.1
Overall Quality
Reputation
3.5
Food
3.3
Clubs
2.2
Facilities
3.1
Internet
2.8
Location
3.6
Opportunities
3.2
Safety
4.1
Social
2.7
Happiness
3.3
Basic Information
Location
- Cleveland, GA
Institution Overview
- Public/Private: Private college
- Established: 1946 (first classes offered: September 1947)
- Founder: George W. Truett, Fernando C. McConnell, Georgia Baptist Convention
Academic information
Degree Courses
- 50+
Key Area
- Sociomicrobiology & Microbial Interactions
- Laboratory of Intestinal Microbiomics
- Laboratory of Applied and Exercise Endocrinology
- Quorum Sensing and Quorum Quenching
- Exercise Science and Physiology
Student and Staff Numbers
- Students: 2,141 (on campus/online)
- Undergraduates: 2,612
Notable Alumni
- Matt Papa
- Xavier Roberts
- Mitchell Wiggins
- J. T. Tyson
- Lt. Col. Mark London
10 FAQs about this University fromReddit
Students talk about this school
Good reviews
Overall 4.8
Gorgeous campus in the mountains. Great food. The local community comes every Sunday after church to eat in the dining hall, because they enjoy the food! Nice professors who care about you! TMU students sponsor events for the community, who come out by the thousands for Easter egg hunts and trick-or-treating with s'mores and hot choc, etc...
Overall 4.7
TMU is an amazing university. Everyone is so nice and if you do not like it then you won't like anywhere. It is surrounded by beautiful mountains and the college is a true Christian college. You do not need to go if you do not want to hear about God.
Bad reviews
Overall 1.1
new president way too strict. athletic teams are terrible. people who are not professors run the school
Overall 2
The turnover rate is very high. Its a good school if you're looking for a "distinctly baptist" environment. It's a conservative school and some theologies such as Calvinism are openly disputed, even in chapel. A moderate or liberal Christian might not find too much support on campus from faculty or students. Its a good school for theology, though.