Anonymous wrote:Early move-in at UMD today. Confirmed that Ellicott Hall doesn't have A/C and is kind of a dump. Oh well. Hopefully just one year. It will build character.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Realistically, it's only hot for the first month or so. And you really only need to be in the dorms for sleeping. You can study/eat in air conditioned spaces.
It would be very difficult to add air conditioning to some of the older, historic dorms. Window units would throw off the Gothic vibe.
In 1995 maybe. In 2023 and climate change, it’s not until November anywhere below New York .
Yes, over Covid we at Thanksgiving OUTSIDE in shorts.
We've attended holiday parties near Christmas eve time and it's 75 degrees.
First month, my a$$.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has your kid never been to sleepaway camp? Some of those accommodations are really shabby and threadbare. I'm UMC and I say GOOD. It's a safe way for them to know they're starting to be on their own, and mommy and daddy aren't going to be there to make everything all nice.
Also, to worry about your college-age son rolling off his bed is a bit infantilizing.
Not a lot of families send their kids to sleepaway camp in this area. We're not in NY.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Realistically, it's only hot for the first month or so. And you really only need to be in the dorms for sleeping. You can study/eat in air conditioned spaces.
It would be very difficult to add air conditioning to some of the older, historic dorms. Window units would throw off the Gothic vibe.
In 1995 maybe. In 2023 and climate change, it’s not until November anywhere below New York .
Anonymous wrote:My DS is in a forced triple. No one wanted top bunk so 2 kids bought those super expensive 20” risers. The beds *barely* fit in them (with help of mallet!) and I suspect we’ll never detach them. But honestly only way to make this living space work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe we need to define crappy.
old, worn down, musty, moldy, broken furniture, cracked walls
Who on earth would pay $80k for their kid to live in such a room?
IMO, small rooms is a given for most dorms. As long as it's clean and well kept, I have no problem with it. But, some of the stories I've heard... ew... especially the bathrooms.
Well, the less competitive schools usually have gorgeous dorms OP, and generous money packages - so have at it!
The "more competitive" schools cannot afford to install AC in dorms? Why did the tuition dollars in those 80K "more competitive" schools go? Financial aid?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is no snowflake, and we are just an ordinary MC family. For the past 18 years they have had their own room and bathroom, a full-sized bed, and air conditioning. Now they are at a supposed to be "elite" college, sharing a tiny room that barely fits two twin beds and two small desks, using crappy drawers that were literally tucked in the tiny closet, having no A/C in the 90 degrees weather with a useless window that doesn't open (maybe because it's on the first floor), and trekking down to the communal bathrooms 100 ft down the hallway at night. The noise from the laundry room next door doesn't make it easy to get a good sleep. The tiny beds are awkwardly placed in the middle of the room, and I can definitely see DC rolling down the bed at night, but it's impossible to make both beds against a wall due to the size of the room. Overall, it's worse than a motel.
My kid is tired and excited right now and it hasn't hit them yet that they are going to need to fit in a fridge, a microwave, and storage for various supplies. I am sure they will figure it out by themselves later (or happily living in a chaos), but as a parent I am disappointed. Those Youtube dorm tours are so deceiving! I can only hope the education they are getting there will be worth it.
He got the worst dorm room! They don’t need a refrigerator or microwave. We never had food in our room circa 1990. I don’t know if students eat more or what but we managed with meal plans and occasional restaurants.
But the beds meeting in the middle of the room is unacceptable. It was probably a single room and they overbooked and stuck another bed in there. I would get pictures and let who is head of housing know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Realistically, it's only hot for the first month or so. And you really only need to be in the dorms for sleeping. You can study/eat in air conditioned spaces.
It would be very difficult to add air conditioning to some of the older, historic dorms. Window units would throw off the Gothic vibe.
In 1995 maybe. In 2023 and climate change, it’s not until November anywhere below New York .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like a college dorm to me. What 40 and 50 year old find intolerable, 19yo will adapt.
+1. It’s college not a resort. Parents these days …
Anonymous wrote:Realistically, it's only hot for the first month or so. And you really only need to be in the dorms for sleeping. You can study/eat in air conditioned spaces.
It would be very difficult to add air conditioning to some of the older, historic dorms. Window units would throw off the Gothic vibe.