• Organize and track the schools that YOU are interested in.
  • Get matched up with schools that fit your personality.
  • Determine your chances at each school CP covers.
  • Calculate your costs at any school.

Free Profile Tools

Do I Stand A Chance?

Calculate YOUR chances of admission at every school CP covers!

__%

Personality Match

Calculate YOUR personality match with every school CP covers!

__%

What'll It Cost Me?

Estimate your out-of-pocket costs at every school CP covers!

$__,___

Facts

Slang

  • Convo - Every Wednesday at 10 a.m., students gather in Firestone Fieldhouse to listen to guest speakers and learn about campus events in order to fulfill their mandatory half-unit “convo credit,” or convocation credit. You must attend fourteen convocations per semester to get an A.
  • Greek Row - The five freshman dorms located farthest from central campus, with Greek letters for names instead of numbers.
  • Malibu Yo’ - Malibu Yogurt, every female student’s favorite frozen yogurt shop.
  • OneStop - If you need to do anything—from paying your bills to changing your major to contesting a grade—OneStop is the place to go. It’s located in the TAC.
  • PCH - Pacific Coast Highway.
  • TechDeck - The people to see if you need software, or have any technology-related questions.
  • The ’Bu - What locals call Malibu.
  • The “Peppervine” - Pepperdine’s rampant rumor mill.
  • The AC - The Appleby Center, home to the social science people.
  • The CAC - The Cultural Arts Center. Artists, English majors, and would-be historians and teachers all congregate here for the bulk of their classes.
  • The Caf - The Waves Café, the only cafeteria on campus.
  • The CCB - The relatively new Center for Communication and Business, where communications and business majors spend the bulk of their time. It’s up the hill a ways from central campus, which means that getting to class in the CCB, right after a class down the hill, can be a hurried and grueling endeavor.
  • The HAWC - Pronounced “Hawk,” this is the 24-hour student recreation center, with a pool table, a Ping-Pong table, a computer lab, a coffee shop, and places to study.
  • The Inn - The Malibu Inn, a popular bar just down the road.
  • The SAC - Building where most of the language classes meet, up the hill from main campus.
  • The Stinkies - Malibu Canyon Village Apartments, nicknamed for their persistent sewage odor.
  • The TAC - The Thornton Administrative Center, where the top-dog administrators have their offices and where students usually go to sort out financial or academic matters.
  • The TCC - The Tyler Campus Center, which houses the Rockwell Dining Center, the Sandbar, the Career Center, and various other resources for students.
  • UM - University Ministries.
  • Zuma - Zuma beach, the most popular of the local beaches. Not great for surfing, but it's where 50% of the student body can be found on spring weekends.

Things I Wish I Knew Before Coming To School

  • Frozen yogurt is not the same as ice cream.
  • Getting up and going to convo at 10 a.m. on Wednesdays is a harder feat to accomplish than it would seem.
  • Surfing is hard.
  • They really are serious about the whole religion thing.
  • Wearing white socks with black sandals and shorts is considered unacceptable.

Tips to Succeed

  • As with any other school, to succeed academically requires
  • Be sociable. Pepperdine students are, on average, very friendly, so if you’re not afraid to be a little gregarious, you will make friends in a hurry.
  • If you decide to join a fraternity or sorority, be aware that Greek life will demand a lot of your time and energy; during pledge week, it is very easy to tell which freshmen are pledging, as they are the ones nodding off in your 8 a.m. classes.
  • If you’re not Christian or not particularly religious, know that Pepperdine does not take its Christian mission statement lightly. Don’t be surprised, for example, that you need to take three semesters of religion instruction. And don’t be annoyed by all the religious fervor on campus, because, after all, an awful lot of students choose Pepperdine specifically because of its Christian affiliation.
  • Strike up good relationships with your professors, especially the ones teaching your major courses, immediately. Simply put, you will do better in their courses if you do. Also, it’s good to build contacts for when you need advice or recommendations.
  • Take advantage of the international programs. If possible, spend a whole year somewhere. You won’t regret it.
  • Take the Great Books Colloquium in lieu of a freshman seminar course. It’s a four-semester obligation, but it satisfies a number of GE credits and is excellent preparation for the tougher courses you’ll face as an upperclassman. It will help you immensely to think, discuss, argue, and write like a college student.
  • that you know—or learn quickly—how to balance your time and resist the temptation to, for example, hit the bars every night of the week.

Urban Legends

  • The giant cross that stands out in front of Pepperdine, and which was built to light up at night, is now forever dimmed because of the protests of Barbra Streisand. The story goes that after the Phillips Theme Tower (which houses the cross) was first built, Pepperdine lit it up like a Christian beacon to the world, but the light kept disturbing Streisand’s slumber at night. She supposedly complained to the Malibu City Council, which compelled Pepperdine to turn out the lights, and which gave us yet another reason to dislike Barbra Streisand.

Traditions

  • AWOL - The Alumni Association sponsors a week-long sendoff, called “A Week Of Leaving,” for graduating seniors each April. Perks for seniors include free barbecue meals around noon and little trinkets and Pepperdine memorabilia so that you never forget where you went to college. The Alumni Association also uses this week to get the soon-to-be-alumni involved in the association’s activities.
  • Frosh Follies - In this culmination of new student orientation freshmen interpret the life of George Pepperdine, the university’s founding father, according to a theme. Recent skits have incorporated Greek Mythology, 90s sitcoms and Forrest Gump. The grand performance, held just prior to the start of classes for the fall semester, is judged by administrators and George Pepperdine’s family. Upperclassmen show up en masse to watch freshmen embarrass themselves.
  • Homecoming - Since there is no football team, Homecoming events center around the basketball teams. The events are a means of coaxing alumni and friends of Pepperdine to come visit their alma mater, relive their youth, and then go home and send Pepperdine some more donations.
  • Midnight Yelling - Although quiet hours in the dorms officially last for 24 hours a day during finals, dorm dwellers typically celebrate the midnight hour on each night of finals week by yelling and screaming in unison. Yes, it’s pretty dumb. The tradition occasionally coincides with the “undie run,” in which guys run around in various states of undress. This is as wild as Pepperdine gets, folks.
  • Songfest - Pepperdine’s version of a Spring Sing, this musical competition is the battle royale for sorority and fraternity bragging rights. Three weeks of midnight rehearsals culminate in a solid week of performances, with guest judges—usually minor TV celebrities—deciding which group of singing and dancing students wins.
  • The Freedom Wall - Outside the Tyler Campus Center is a large corkboard on which students air their grievances or post their opinions on political, social, or academic issues. The “Freedom Wall” is supposed to foster intellectual debate, but mainly people start silly arguments or post dumb cartoons on it.

School Spirit

Some students have oodles of school spirit. Others just don’t. Those who have it tend to be fraternity and sorority members, student council types, or otherwise extraordinarily enthusiastic personalities.

Most Recent Contributing Author

Name: Jackie Fetzer
Hometown: Huntersville, NC
Major: English Writing and Rhetoric

Jackie tried out for Pepperdine's water polo team without knowing how to swim first?and made it!

Contributing Author Internship

College Prowler is actively seeking talented students to be "Contributing Authors," and assist with updating the College Prowler guide to their school. This is a great opportunity for a student to gain internship experience, be a part of a nationally recognized company, gain tremendous exposure, utilize new media techniques, and share advice with high school students about what life is really like at your college. Read more about the internship.