Perhaps you might go into a little more detail on why this school is better than others, what specific parts of the program are better or into which types of students most likely will find a home at it given lots of personal choice and needs for training no one program will be perfect in all ways for. A website link is nice even if not saying much of anything/does not tell anything beyond blank pages for the theater department and tech links.
How does this theater school compare in ratings to say NYU or Yale - not that any one school has to be number one in being good for a specific person attending. What's it's compisition of students attending in major, how's it's balance of graduate student in technical theater to undergraduate, what extent of the production schedule is student run
etc. or grad student taught so as to free up the other instructors for more in depth courses, is the main theater a IA shop, and what type of or how specific of a degree BFA or BA for instace beyond specifically say sound design/production verses general theater degrees given out. Given many aspects of production, how many and what types of classes will be involved specific to the interest. I noted a main
stage theater, are there others such as black box and classroom theaters
etc?
I do not mean to down rate this school in any way, only that in your posting just the website or a sentence about it in a second post, it does not
express much about the school as compaired for instance to what I and others have said about ISU and a few other schools in letting people know what it's like and what people most likely would find it a useful program to them.
When I saw the website as a reply with nothing else said the first time, I clicked on it and got no useful information in wishing to learn about the program. The second posting on it did not say much either thus this request in further understanding the program.
Somewhere about what is it say 16 years ago now I got 3.6 credits for a stagecraft class in junior college. It was also the only tech theater class it had. The full time college only gave like 2 or 3 credits for such a class, yet I wonder what I missed in seeing students taking this class and having to go to the shop and actually
build stuff like a small soft
flat as opposed to having to work a show as normal and learn the rest in a text
book or class example. Class descriptions from a school programming list are about the same as they are everywhere. How in depth a course is can't be expressed well just by way of website, it's more a question of real description about the program and it's various courses or how in depth they are such as setting up the table saw diagionally to cut coves of various sizes in foam as once taught in the plastics part of plastics and metals for the the theater. Or given a large production schedule, what percentage of students might get burned out in both having to do all shows and study? Those little details that just won't be expressed sufficiently on a website but might be useful. You no doubt can help others with beyond providing the web link.