Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Every Slac we visited had guaranteed and often required on campus housing for all four years. The larger schools did not - BC, Tufts, Northeastern.
From WashU website dated last year:
“Washington University guarantees housing for all undergraduates. All 1,800 members of the Class of 2026 will live on the South 40. And some 3,030 returning students have chosen to live in university housing. WashU also has expanded housing options for graduate students.”
But I would call and verify if it’s important to you. Things change. Websites don’t always get updated in all places.
Northeastern has guaranteed housing for 4 years for the Boston direct admits.
Upper-class gets priorities, too so my junior kid now has a nice single room in a apartment style building.
However don't most kids like to live off-campus after 1-2 years?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Every Slac we visited had guaranteed and often required on campus housing for all four years. The larger schools did not - BC, Tufts, Northeastern.
From WashU website dated last year:
“Washington University guarantees housing for all undergraduates. All 1,800 members of the Class of 2026 will live on the South 40. And some 3,030 returning students have chosen to live in university housing. WashU also has expanded housing options for graduate students.”
But I would call and verify if it’s important to you. Things change. Websites don’t always get updated in all places.
Northeastern has guaranteed housing for 4 years for the Boston direct admits.
Upper-class gets priorities, too so my junior kid now has a nice single room in a apartment style building.
However don't most kids like to live off-campus after 1-2 years?
I think it depends on the school. All the action at my school was on campus and campus wasn't exactly integrated into any town. Living off campus took you away from a lot of student activities. At a state school where the university is part of the town and there are non-university housing options, then I understand not living "on campus"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Every Slac we visited had guaranteed and often required on campus housing for all four years. The larger schools did not - BC, Tufts, Northeastern.
From WashU website dated last year:
“Washington University guarantees housing for all undergraduates. All 1,800 members of the Class of 2026 will live on the South 40. And some 3,030 returning students have chosen to live in university housing. WashU also has expanded housing options for graduate students.”
But I would call and verify if it’s important to you. Things change. Websites don’t always get updated in all places.
Northeastern has guaranteed housing for 4 years for the Boston direct admits.
Upper-class gets priorities, too so my junior kid now has a nice single room in a apartment style building.
However don't most kids like to live off-campus after 1-2 years?
Anonymous wrote:I lived off-campus except for sophomore year. Let the kid grow up. Teach them how to sign a lease.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I lived off-campus except for sophomore year. Let the kid grow up. Teach them how to sign a lease.
Agreed. Just a caveat that parents also cosign a lease.
Anonymous wrote:Every Slac we visited had guaranteed and often required on campus housing for all four years. The larger schools did not - BC, Tufts, Northeastern.
From WashU website dated last year:
“Washington University guarantees housing for all undergraduates. All 1,800 members of the Class of 2026 will live on the South 40. And some 3,030 returning students have chosen to live in university housing. WashU also has expanded housing options for graduate students.”
But I would call and verify if it’s important to you. Things change. Websites don’t always get updated in all places.
Anonymous wrote:No wonder you folks still have adult kids living at home at age 30. I was an adult at 18 and signed my own lease.
Agree with PP, let the kids grow up.
Anonymous wrote:I lived off-campus except for sophomore year. Let the kid grow up. Teach them how to sign a lease.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Boston College has 3 yrs on campus housing (several exceptions are guaranteed 4 years). Most kids are off campus jr year, most are abroad at least one semester jr year. Then they most all go back to the same area of housing senior year.
Yeah, and the off-campus housing is more expensive than in DC.
Anonymous wrote:I lived on campus at Wake all 4 years, graduated just a week after turning 21, and have been (mostly) successfully adulting for 25 years now.
The rental market in so many college towns is an absolute mess, and I am glad that my child is mostly looking at small schools where housing on campus is guaranteed.