Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Notre Dame has all single-sex dorms AND a big drinking culture as well.
I would not link single-sex dorms to less alcoholic drinking.
Signed,
ND grad
I totally agree. However, parietals did make it easier to get out of a messy situation with the opposite sex if you needed it.
Signed,
Fellow ND grad
Anonymous wrote:Notre Dame has all single-sex dorms AND a big drinking culture as well.
I would not link single-sex dorms to less alcoholic drinking.
Signed,
ND grad
Anonymous wrote:
This (co-ed) environment largely creates different expectations," Carroll continued. "What does it mean as you head down the hallway to the showers, that there's going to be mixed gender? What does that mean when there's that kind of proximity and association?"
Anonymous wrote:College students drink because they see most adults drink when they socialize. Humans worship alcohol and it causes many problems.
Anonymous wrote:I lived in a single sex dorm my freshman year of college. Certainly did not curb the binge drinking.
Anonymous wrote:I lived in a single sex dorm my freshman year of college. Certainly did not curb the binge drinking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A study by Brigham Young University in 2009, published in The Journal of American College Health, found a connection between coed dorms and binge drinking. The study surveyed 510 students at five universities and found that those in coed dorms were 2½ times more likely to engage in binge drinking than those in same-sex dorms.
Casual drinking also follows the same trend. In coed dorms, 56 percent said they drank some alcohol weekly, compared with 27 percent in same-gender dorms.
The study also found the results weren’t indicative of self-selection. In other words, the partyers weren’t asking to live in coed dorms. In most cases, universities simply assigned students where to live.
The study’s results were not unique. As John Garvey, the president of The Catholic University of America, wrote in the Wall Street Journal in 2011, several studies point to binge drinking rates being twice as high in coed dorms as in single-sex housing
Read more at http://national.deseretnews.com/article/3433/Hard-liquor-ban-is-good-start-but-public-schools-also-need-return-to-single-sex-dorms.html#vfyVG6sOhhOfH4F5.99
I read that. What I meant was more like: why did they even think of doing that study? Where's the logical connection? Why would people in single sex dorms be less likely to binge drink?