They don't teach anything, teachers say nasty things about students behind their backs, and they treat them very badly, too. I studied for 3 years, and during this time all that has changed in college is that the old building began to be rented out to some people. There is no repair, the college is literally falling apart before our eyes. Local toilets have turned into smoking rooms and it's not even a secret. No one even tries to fight this, but instead every year there are all sorts of stories about how someone sniffed Mef ## or in the toilet and how someone got knocked up almost in the first year. There are dogs running around the college grounds that regularly rush at students, half of the equipment that stands on the college grounds does not work, but simply rots and stands for beauty. I saw one tractor from the working equipment. I remember sitting in class, looked at the shelf and there the books were all covered in gray-green mold. I don't think this is normal. I studied to be a plasterer, but I didn't really see the plaster, I worked with mud and stones. Despite the fact that the educational process has not changed. They just threw dirt on the wall and corners for 3 years. Every month they catch underage drunks, drug addicts, moreover, those who were students of this college.
Conclusion: Study better to enroll in something more prestigious. It is better to become a crazy homeless drunk for 3 years than to study here.
I studied here for 3 years
I've never seen a worse college.
Let's start with education, it's not what it is.
In practice, they do not teach at all, we plaster with mud, there are no electrodes for welding, as the teacher told us, "if you want to learn welding, then bring the electrodes."
The teachers' relationship is disgusting, I can insult you directly.
I'm not talking about toilets at all, you can't go into them for a break, so you have to go out in class.
Don't come here, everything except that.
It's great that there is a college in the city and the district, but unfortunately the memory of the orphanage has not been preserved, although the graduates still did a couple of times. And I would really like the college to bear the name of Jan Alekseevich Kurchevsky, a wonderful man, athlete, teacher, teacher, friend and father for many orphanages