Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is Southern CA folks so your blithe attitude about AC is unfounded. School can more than afford to provide it too. The basement part is what gets me the most-how a school of this caliber can get away with throwing kids in a dungeon and pretending that’s ok is beyond me!
To OP, these comments are wrong. I went to a So Cal school in "desertucky" according to DCUM. The weather is amazing! It is not that hot outside of the first 2 or 3 weeks, but a fan will do the trick. It is not Texas. The temperature drops like a bullet the second the sun goes down, and it's more likely you'll underpack jackets like I did freshman year. She will be fine!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hear you. My very quiet kid has been assigned to a triple. He had read that his college has a lengthy questionnaire for incoming freshmen to match roommates and assign people to hall sections, including a free response essay about interests and the opportunity to request a single. But when the housing form came out this year, it asked exactly two questions: one about sleeping habits and another about visitors. Then it took until near the end of July for the college to even tell him where he's living. Not sure how random assignments took that long. He's not happy, not excited, and not optimistic. I am starting to regret the horror stories I've told him over the years about my own experience in a freshman year triple. Not good.
This is not uncommon timing for room/dorm assignments
Anonymous wrote:I hear you. My very quiet kid has been assigned to a triple. He had read that his college has a lengthy questionnaire for incoming freshmen to match roommates and assign people to hall sections, including a free response essay about interests and the opportunity to request a single. But when the housing form came out this year, it asked exactly two questions: one about sleeping habits and another about visitors. Then it took until near the end of July for the college to even tell him where he's living. Not sure how random assignments took that long. He's not happy, not excited, and not optimistic. I am starting to regret the horror stories I've told him over the years about my own experience in a freshman year triple. Not good.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lots of schools have dorms without AC. It will be an issue for maybe a couple of warm weeks. Get a fan, open the windows. Some students have to get the basement rooms. Luck of the draw.
OP said basement, so no window fan or open windows if they care about safety. I wouldn't care about the singles part, but the basement part would infuriate me. If it's a private school and you're full pay call
OP did not say it was private
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People lived without air conditioning for thousands of years. Your snowflake will survive.
Studies done *on college students* show that sleeping in temperatures that are too warm cause lower math scores on tests. Authors compared math scores from students in dorms with A/C and dorms without.
So this is academically important. A/C is not a frivolous demand these days.
I'm so curious about this. Can you cite the study?
Some questions I would have:
1. Who funded the study?
2. Was it peer-reviewed?
3. Did it control for other variables?
4. What was the magnitude of impact on test scores?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lots of schools have dorms without AC. It will be an issue for maybe a couple of warm weeks. Get a fan, open the windows. Some students have to get the basement rooms. Luck of the draw.
OP said basement, so no window fan or open windows if they care about safety. I wouldn't care about the singles part, but the basement part would infuriate me. If it's a private school and you're full pay call
Anonymous wrote:This is Southern CA folks so your blithe attitude about AC is unfounded. School can more than afford to provide it too. The basement part is what gets me the most-how a school of this caliber can get away with throwing kids in a dungeon and pretending that’s ok is beyond me!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hear you. My very quiet kid has been assigned to a triple. He had read that his college has a lengthy questionnaire for incoming freshmen to match roommates and assign people to hall sections, including a free response essay about interests and the opportunity to request a single. But when the housing form came out this year, it asked exactly two questions: one about sleeping habits and another about visitors. Then it took until near the end of July for the college to even tell him where he's living. Not sure how random assignments took that long. He's not happy, not excited, and not optimistic. I am starting to regret the horror stories I've told him over the years about my own experience in a freshman year triple. Not good.
Did you agree to pay for a double? I'm curious if colleges honor requests if you ask for double or single and are willing to pay the higher rate.