Am I saying this right?
I am a student at the Faculty of X in the university Y.
For example,
I am a student at the Faculty of Arts in the university of Oxford
I know that, for example, one says: "I am a student at the university X". I am not sure what happens when there is "the faculty of X" in the play. Thanks a lot!
Best Answer
"Faculty" is a venerable term for a university division1, still used by some schools either in place of or alongside more modern designations like "department" and "school"2.
In all cases (Faculty of X, X Department, etc.) you could say either
or, if your division has its own "name", such as a named College or professional school within a larger university,
You could also say
Your specific example doesn't work, because as far as I can tell, the University of Oxford (the famous old one in England) doesn't currently have a Faculty of Arts.3 However, one could say:
or, respectively,
The first set are quite formal, suitable for writing in a cover letter to a resume; the last is probably more natural when speaking, and I think would be most universally understood.
Note that you should avoid saying "I'm an Arts Faculty student", at least in the US, because "faculty" can mean "professor" so it sounds contradictory.
1 According to Wikipedia,
2 (Source)
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3 (Source)