Anonymous wrote:I've never heard of kids' being expected to share beds, but it seems kind of weird to me. It seems as if it would be awkward among the kids, and, as a practical matter, would not result in a good night's sleep. Don't most teens like to sleep in their underwear or naked? That would make it even more awkward, I think.
I would argue that a 2-bed room with a rolling bed for a third would be a better option for everyone.
Anonymous wrote:It is pretty typical. I remember being in high school 30 years ago and we were 4 to a room, 2 per bed, back then, too.
Anonymous wrote:Non-American, and yes, this would weird me out.
But I also find it so surprising that American adults in university are expected to share a room. With a stranger, no less.
Anonymous wrote:Yes 2 per bed/ 4 per room is normal. I've heard of a few kids brining their sleeping bag and sleeping on the floor because they didn't want to share a bed. So I guess that's always an option but I would be kind of grossed out about sleeping on a hotel room floor.
Anonymous wrote:For the Europeans, if twin beds were as rare in European hotels as they are here, would that change anything? Or would European parents simply pay twice as much?
Anonymous wrote:We traveled for sports and band and stuff all the time at my international school in Europe back in the 80s and that school was only 60 percent Americans. No one had a problem with it. Occasionally some kid would chose to sleep on the floor, and some kids would roll a blanket up or put a pillow in the middle to create a little boundary or sleep head to toe or whatever but most of us would just shrug and accept that we suspend normal rules when we travel and go with the flow.
Anonymous wrote:I've never heard of kids' being expected to share beds, but it seems kind of weird to me. It seems as if it would be awkward among the kids, and, as a practical matter, would not result in a good night's sleep. Don't most teens like to sleep in their underwear or naked? That would make it even more awkward, I think.
I would argue that a 2-bed room with a rolling bed for a third would be a better option for everyone.