Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“Flip you for it.”
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would be worried that this girl is pretty self focused. It is just not a great way to begin a room mate relationship. Yes I see that she had that bed last semester but that roommate left. It is a new start.
I would not reply for a while. My reply might include something about waiting to hear on my single.
In the end it will probably be fine.
Really, so if the current resident hadn't had to remove all of his or her stuff, you think the new roommate could have come in and said, "It's a new start, let's flip for your bed!"? Of course not, that's ridiculous. I don't see why this situation should play out any differently.
Really? I remember my freshman year in college, my rooming group had a situation where there were some rooming options that was clearly superior to the rest (it was a suite with not enough single bedrooms for all -- some would get a single, others would have to double up). We didn't do it by "first dibs" and have that be the way all year -- in fact, the only argument not to change is that it's not worth it to move. We switched at semesters. That seems fair.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If it's the same room, and the person was there last semester, I think it's not so unreasonable although poorly worded. I would roll with it and hope for the best. Getting along with a difficult roommate is a pain but it is good to do it at least once, and a Spring semester seems like an ideal time honestly. That way it's not a whole year.
+1
Anonymous wrote:That would likely annoy both my child and me. Why should one person get to make unilateral decisions when there is a roommate? I agree with the flip for it idea.
Anonymous wrote:I would say “sure no problem.” I would be a little annoyed but giving up the bed I want is not as bad as starting off in the wrong foot with somebody I have to live with. And it’s not a crazy request.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would be worried that this girl is pretty self focused. It is just not a great way to begin a room mate relationship. Yes I see that she had that bed last semester but that roommate left. It is a new start.
I would not reply for a while. My reply might include something about waiting to hear on my single.
In the end it will probably be fine.
Really, so if the current resident hadn't had to remove all of his or her stuff, you think the new roommate could have come in and said, "It's a new start, let's flip for your bed!"? Of course not, that's ridiculous. I don't see why this situation should play out any differently.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would be worried that this girl is pretty self focused. It is just not a great way to begin a room mate relationship. Yes I see that she had that bed last semester but that roommate left. It is a new start.
I would not reply for a while. My reply might include something about waiting to hear on my single.
In the end it will probably be fine.
Really, so if the current resident hadn't had to remove all of his or her stuff, you think the new roommate could have come in and said, "It's a new start, let's flip for your bed!"? Of course not, that's ridiculous. I don't see why this situation should play out any differently.
Anonymous wrote:I would be worried that this girl is pretty self focused. It is just not a great way to begin a room mate relationship. Yes I see that she had that bed last semester but that roommate left. It is a new start.
I would not reply for a while. My reply might include something about waiting to hear on my single.
In the end it will probably be fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do colleges insist on this outdated idea of roommates anyway? My eighth grader, who is an only child, insists that she would rather commute to George Mason when she is in college than share a room.
Are there schools where single rooms the norm, or at least a possibility for a freshman?
I hope your child is planning for a career field that will afford her the opportunity to live alone for the rest of her life.
Sharing an apartment is not the same as sharing a room.
And when she gets married?
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Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do colleges insist on this outdated idea of roommates anyway? My eighth grader, who is an only child, insists that she would rather commute to George Mason when she is in college than share a room.
Are there schools where single rooms the norm, or at least a possibility for a freshman?
Some schools let you buy out the other half of a double for a higher price, often twice the rate you'd pay with a roommate. Others have honors dorms set up as four-person suites with individual bedrooms and a common room. Alabama comes to mind.
But gat dang, assuming she goes to a school that allows students to live off campus as a sophomore and up, it's one frigg'n year — and that year is crucial to finding your niche and establishing yourself as part of the campus scene. Is sharing a room for a year that terrifying for your kid that she'd rather be a loser living at home in her childhood bedroom and not having a life on campus than just learn to deal with the temporary inconvenience?