St. John's College

College · Annapolis

St. John's College

College · Annapolis
60 College Ave, Annapolis, MD 21401

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St. John's College by null
St. John's College by null
St. John's College by null
St. John's College by null
St. John's College by null
St. John's College by null
St. John's College by null
St. John's College by null
St. John's College by null
St. John's College by null
St. John's College by null
St. John's College by null
St. John's College by null
St. John's College by null
St. John's College by null
St. John's College by null
St. John's College by null
St. John's College by null
St. John's College by null
St. John's College by null
St. John's College by null
St. John's College by null
St. John's College by null
St. John's College by null
St. John's College by null
St. John's College by null
St. John's College by null
St. John's College by null

Highlights

Private liberal arts college with beautiful campus overlooking waterfront  

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60 College Ave, Annapolis, MD 21401 Get directions

sjc.edu
@stjohnsartssci

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60 College Ave, Annapolis, MD 21401 Get directions

+1 410 263 2371
sjc.edu
@stjohnsartssci
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@stjohnscollege

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Features

wheelchair accessible parking lot
wheelchair accessible entrance

Last updated

Aug 10, 2025

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Nathan Betz

Google
One of the single best investments of my life. Worth every penny, every second, every moment of turbulent thought and enlightening conversation with some of the most interesting people in the world. After earning my MA here (went to William and Mary as undergrad), I continued into a successful career in the advertising industry, and then followed that by pursuing more advanced study at the University of Oxford.

Eva Abaddon

Google
Like this place. Peaceful and calm.

noochinator1

Google
Greatest school on earth! Hobbes and Aristotle will teach you to shake off pusillanimity and small-souledness forever. Stop paying for a shrink and use the money for Graduate Institute tuition instead!

James Palumbo

Google
One of the oldest colleges in the US, the campus is beautiful. We'll worth a stroll through as it backs up to College Creek.

Johann Kaemingk

Google
I have followed the Liberal Arts Graduate program and the 1,5 year that it took for me to finish the program where amazing. If you want to learn: to read, improve your listening and speaking skills, meet people from all sorts of backgrounds and, for me as a Dutch foreigner, learn about the United States through excellent discussions instead of heavy biased Dutch news, St John College is the place to go. St John college is also a good place for having deep and excellent converstation's about almost every intellectual topic. Except for daily changing hipster fashion, St John college students are in for having great discussions about almost every topic. (for me personally, one of the most awesome aspects of the program are the students and tutors that where open for discusions and where in for other conversations. Unfortuantly many students see ST John college as an individual challenge and do not exploit this opportunity. The most important thing though, is the reading list. If you really want to read great books which can really help you to develop as a person, St John college is your program. The reading list is the most valuable aspect of the program and should also be your main consideration in deciding to go or not to go to this college. You start with texts from Plato, Euclid and finish with persons like Nietzsche and Heidegger. If you want to enrich yourself with many perspectives, and get a basic impression of the development of the western intellectual philosophical tradition. This is the place to go!!!! There are many liberal arts schools that are better for political activism. If you are interested in that, please look for a different liberal arts school and stay away as far as possible form this beautiful place. The only negative thing I have to say is that certain students are to heavenly ideological driven. However this is not the fault of tutors and the program though but the fault of certain students who should not have started this program in the first place. I, as a Dutch student, came to the United States only for ST John College. Although there are certain sounds that the program should be changed to include more authors that fit twenty-first century thinking. My personal advice is to keep doing what St John college is doing. Changing the program to more modern standards will destroy the admosphere and competitive advantage of ST John College compared with other liberal arts schools.

Howard Sauertieg

Google
I graduated from Annapolis but attended the Santa Fe campus for four years. I had a wonderful time reading books and discussing great ideas.

Dominic Crapuchettes

Google
St John's provided an amazing education as well as the best memories of my life. But don't expect to get a good job upon graduating without another degree!

I AM Crystal

Google
I love to visit here and over look the waterfront. 🎣 and 🦀 sight. It's beautiful and friendly.

Chandler P.

Yelp
The people in charge are clueless. Best thing about that place was hosting the croquet match and they're intent on ruining it by not selling tickets.
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HighStandard S.

Yelp
Gem of a campus and fine little bookstore featuring the classics of Western Civ., however, I must take exception to Miss Merrill's review in which she states that this is a hippy institution. One look at the curriculum would be enough to convince anyone that this is perhaps the most conservative college in the country. There are no electives. All students take the same classes for 4 years. The books are primarily by dead white males. Nothing about feminism, postmodernism, queer studies, environmentalism and other typical ways of thinking that undergraduates are usually exposed to is studied here. Also, if you take a look a the faculty, you will find that most are dinosaurs and some of the more prominent ones are unabashedly right wing. This is a place where students dress up---not required, but many do so voluntarily ---to go to class and address one another formally as Mr. and Miss during class discussions. Waltz parties are popular. The place, at times, has a very retro vibe that is more 40's and 50's than 60's and 70's. Many of the students here have "old souls" and do not relate to, nor approve of, their "hippy" peers.
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Merrill F.

Yelp
Oh...where to begin. I think the grading system really sets the tone for the school. There are no grades. Your teachers simply get in a room and discuss your performance. You sit there and dont' say anything. Then, they decide whether you advance. Basically, this is a hippie school. Deeply liberal, with a heavy focus on writing, reading, and thinking. The campus is beautiful, though small, right in downtown Annapolis and right up the road from the Naval Acadamy. The annual Navy/St. John's croquet match is something to behold. The only sport in which St. John's can kick Navy's ass (and possibly the only sport in which they excell (or even have) at all). Seriously, it's awesome.
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Shekinah S.

Yelp
Beautiful historic campus and I used to sneak in and use the computer lab. Shh, don't tell anyone!
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Bobby R.

Yelp
St. John's College is often discussed by outsiders whose opinions seem the more calcified in proportion to the the less actual experience they have there : ). As an alum (Class of 2003, woot), I feel I have something authentic to say. St. John's is a college where you are immersed in the great questions of western civilization. What is the soul like? What is a happy life? What is the truth? If these questions seem too broad, know that they are set in a context of books. You never stop reading at St. John's. Freshman year you meet the Greeks, sophomore year you talk God talk, junior year you do a bunch of science, senior year you talk about relativity. (Seriously, it's heavy reading. You'll be prepared for graduate school) More so, you really communicate and say serious things and actually raise the bar on your taste in many areas. St. John's is a great place to "find yourself" intellectually. It's for people who want to teach themselves. And the campus is beautiful and small enough to really know the people you go to school with, through many extracurricular activities ranging from flag football to singing hymns to playing rock music to volunteering in a classroom with children. (I did each of those.) The only drawback to me (and know this beforehand) is that you will not major in anything. You will be prepared for many things, but on paper it will be hard for others in our specialized society to know that. Upon graduation, you will have to find your way in life with a Bachelor of Arts in philosophy. Therefore, before graduation, it is critical to find things you enjoy outside of class, maybe be looking for an internship in something, talk about direction with a counselor or friends. End of speech.

St. John's A.

Yelp
In looking at the other reviews of St. John's, I'm curious if they attended the same St. John's I did. I was a student in the Graduate Institute. The first class was very telling. The tutor simply walked in, called the role, and asked a question. He neither passed out a syllabus, nor articulated any goals and objectives for the course. Nor did he articulate what he expected from the students during the semester. Even hints for how to succeed in the course would have been appreciated. How does all of this ambiguity aid the learning process? This was true for all of the segments I took at St. John's. The tutors either could not or would not articulate any expectations to the students, but were quick to criticize at the end of the semester when their internal expectations were not met. Success was always a moving target. At the end of the semester, I was shocked when students were not given anonymous course evaluations to fill out. My undergraduate college took course evaluations very seriously. Why doesn't St. John's want anonymous, candid feedback from students? Does the administration not care what students think? As for the classes themselves, the tutors did not encourage students to synthesize or take a larger view of the great books. We went from book-to-book with no analysis in between or at the end of the semester. Some tutors did a good job at furthering and guiding class discussions, but most were unimpressive. Most of the time, I wasn't sure why the tutor was even in the room. Finally, I would encourage prospective undergraduate or graduate students to ask the right questions. Taking the guided tour of the library and King William Room won't help you make a good decision about whether to attend St. John's. Visit a class, but meet with the tutor before-hand. Find out HOW this person runs a class. Ask for a syllabus. Get details. Finally, I don't think St. John's is worth the time or money. I'd like to suggest a few cheaper alternatives I found on the internet: Cal State Dominguez Hills http://www.csudh.edu/hux/default.html American Public University http://www.amu.apus.edu/academic/programs/degree/1206/master-of-arts-in-humanities-capstone-option Harrison Middleton University www.hmu.edu Thanks, A graduate of St. John's College
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Spot Z.

Yelp
I am in the Graduate Institute, finished two of the four required segments, and have to say this is the greatest school I've ever attended. Be forewarned, it's a readers' school, and there is a LOT of demanding reading -- most of the coursework is simply banging your head against very difficult books and taking them on one clause at a time. (That's one thing I learned here: don't read a sentence at a time, read a clause at a time.) Yes, it is expensive, around 9K a semester, but if you're spending money on a shrink, use that money for the Graduate Institute instead -- Hobbes and Aristotle will teach you to shake off pusillanimity and small-souledness much more effectively than an empathetic therapist will. Oh, and the classes: the students and tutor(s) sit around a table facing each other rather than facing forward towards an instructor, and students are expected to put up or shut up. You'll learn to assert yourself and make your points against highly confident, whip-smart people. Laptops in class are disdained, I've never seen one used yet. The dinner hour in between classes is a blast, where intellectual "sparks are flying from electrical pylons" (to quote Elvis Costello). Only two more semesters until I graduate, and it's gonna break my heart to leave.