Anonymous wrote:I have to think when this occurs there is a higher acceptance yield and housing desire than modeled. I recall Penn State doing this in a certain male dormitory in the 80s. The rooms were huge study lounges and maybe even two stories tall. Depending on the group of guys, it was a great place to hang out— as there were no shows or attrition at the end of the first semester, students were offered the opportunity to move somewhere on campus in a standard room. In my experience, those students who were admitted early in the cycle and paid housing deposits right away, were not in this predicament.
Anonymous wrote:And DCUM complains that admissions offices are obsessed with yield.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fordham does “forced triples” where they jam a third student into a double.
I was in one back around the millennium, I know they've added a few dorms, but not enough.
They are having financial trouble. They’ve permanently increased the freshman class size and forced triples is part of how they’re handling it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I read on here this is happening at JMU as well this year.
About 500 freshman will be in triples to begin.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fordham does “forced triples” where they jam a third student into a double.
I was in one back around the millennium, I know they've added a few dorms, but not enough.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What size room are they sticking 8 kids in? That sounds hard.
The"converted rooms"seem to be lounges or study spaces. Still, it's not optimal for incoming freshman students.