| Socializing in a common dining room is important! It’s sad to think that many kids are eating takeout alone. I will be looking at this carefully as we tour colleges. Thanks, OP, for bringing this issue to my attention. |
lol at buffet style being gross but not chic-fil-a |
| These kids don't know how to talk to anyone, eat meals with anyone, or date anyone without their phones. We are so sick. |
what does this mean? many are unlimited swipes |
I’m not sure of the definitions of swipes, points, a la carte, but I have a freshman at BC. He starts each semester with preset $ amount ($3000 or so) like a debit card and pays for every item he buys. But, more to the point of this thread, I think, is that the dining hall is a very social place, at least most weekday dinners. The big dining hall is almost exclusively freshman and sophomores and I think it lends itself well with getting together and hanging out a bit after the day’s classes and/or before evening study. |
Um, speak for yourself |
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Most college campuses have relatively healthy dining hall food these days.
Having to eat out all the time seems way, way, unhealthier and doesn't make for a great social experience. |
Eating disorder? |
Right. Nothing gross about "chic fil [sic]." |
This was something the Ivy League understood. But it does have its own problems: Harvard students revolt against revolting mozzarella sticks and fried chicken burgers https://www.thecrimson.com/article/2025/2/12/huds-menu-updates/ |
Food is humane. For $90K/yr, it's worth spending a little more on food (if it even costs more!) to make college feel like community. College shouldn't be teaching young adults how to be sad diabetic loners. Crappy old dorms with food beat fancy new dorms with sad Chik fil A. |
Our lunch lady was such a crazy mall cop about it that half the fun of eating was trying to sneak an apple past her as the door. |
Is the point that for $90k, we expect a college to have a community feel (as BC does)? |
UCSD does have several large dorm adjacent dining halls as well as more specialized ones (sushi, noodles, bbq, poke etc). But none are set up cafeteria style like when I went there in the 80's. |
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Having one dining hall at a SLAC could be annoying at times, especially if you wanted to avoid certain people. But it was good to see your friends.
I also studied abroad and there was a dining hall in the UK, but there was a points system and each food item was a certain number of points and you could not go over the amount allotted. We actually had lunch ladies in weird Victorian style outfits grab things off our tray if we were over points for the meal. I am petite but I was hungry often and often had migraines during this study abroad. They went away after I came home. One girl in my program ended up having an eating disorder while dealing with this meal system and had to leave early. |