Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your 20-year-old is not capable of living off-campus and still successfully attending classes, you should be very concerned.
True, but kids on campus graduate at a higher rate so the OP’s contention, while a little hysterical, isn’t entirely without basis. (Sorry, too lazy to find a link but I recall this fact from a story about Northeastern adding housing in order to improve graduation rates.)
All of the studies are about FRESHMEN living on campus.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your 20-year-old is not capable of living off-campus and still successfully attending classes, you should be very concerned.
True, but kids on campus graduate at a higher rate so the OP’s contention, while a little hysterical, isn’t entirely without basis. (Sorry, too lazy to find a link but I recall this fact from a story about Northeastern adding housing in order to improve graduation rates.)
Anonymous wrote:If your 20-year-old is not capable of living off-campus and still successfully attending classes, you should be very concerned.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a professor and at my school, it would be extraordinarily rare for a junior or senior to live in a dorm. I would absolutely pity the student whose parents forced it.
You’ve conflated dorm with on-campus housing. They aren’t the same. Many colleges have townhouses, apartments, etc.
OK. Not at my campus. On-campus = dorm.
Anonymous wrote:I loved living on campus at my SLAC, you can more easily participate in lots more activities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a professor and at my school, it would be extraordinarily rare for a junior or senior to live in a dorm. I would absolutely pity the student whose parents forced it.
You’ve conflated dorm with on-campus housing. They aren’t the same. Many colleges have townhouses, apartments, etc.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a professor and at my school, it would be extraordinarily rare for a junior or senior to live in a dorm. I would absolutely pity the student whose parents forced it.
Anonymous wrote:My college now requires students to live on campuses all three years. The rule has nothing to do with fostering a learning environment. The school just realized that everyone was moving off campus ASAP and the school was losing on housing and dorm fees. So they tripled up old dorms and required everyone to stay on campus thru junior year. Yuck. I moved off after freshman year.