I am a sophomore studying calligraphy and seal cutting. I would like to know what it would be like to be an exchange student at the Chinese Culture University in Taiwan? …

Hello, I have personally answered many similar questions about exchanges in Taiwan.

Courses such as calligraphy and seal cutting are generally offered under the Department of Chinese Literature in Taiwan. The overall system of Chinese Culture University is similar. It is an ordinary public institution in mainland China. The Chinese Culture University has a Department of Chinese Literature under the Faculty of Liberal Arts, which is quite complete in terms of majors, including undergraduate, master's and doctoral programs.

The Chinese Culture University is located on Yangmingshan Mountain in Taipei. The surrounding area is somewhat remote, but it only takes 10 minutes to take a bus (called bus in mainland China) down the mountain to Taipei's Shilin District, where you'll find the famous Shilin Night Market in Taiwan, as well as MRT (subway) Shilin Station and Jiantan Station.

The tuition of private universities is about 11,000-12,000 RMB per semester, and dormitories usually range from 1,500-3,000 RMB per semester. Prices in Taipei are the highest in Taiwan, and daily living expenses for three meals a month are about 2,000 RMB.

The rest is an overview written by me for your reference:

Chinese Culture University: The school is located in Shilin District, Taipei City. The cultural predecessor is the Chinese Culture College, which is located in Yangzhou, Taipei. The old private university on Mingshan Mountain is a comprehensive university with complete departments. It has many related majors such as grammar, business, science, industry, and agriculture. It has the largest number of undergraduate majors among private universities, so it has many alumni. However, its scores have been declining recently, and the quality of its students has also deteriorated. It is much worse than it was back then. Currently, the scores for grammar, business, science, and engineering are almost always between Jingyi and Yishou, and the scores for agriculture are also much lower than Donghai. Overall, they are similar to Jingyi. Law and journalism are the signature majors of Wenda. This school can also be regarded as the bottom line of the old general universities. In 2011, the program to reward university teaching excellence received a subsidy of NT$30.83 million.