Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:BU does not require students to stay on campus for two years, but it guarantees housing for four years, so there’s no problem staying in campus housing.
BC is the same. Most stay on campus but they don’t have to.
I believe BC does require two years. Students would stay all four if they could...but some are only guaranteed three years.
They generally move off junior year and then back on campus senior year to get the best housing senior year.
BC guarantees 3; does not require.
We’ve heard a gazillion times that seniors vie to come back to live in the trailer park on campus (called “mods” and apparently intended to be temporary but now a cool fun community for seniors who congregate, cookout on their patios, etc).
Anonymous wrote:Would love feedback. I would rather look at schools that mandate dorms for at least two years. Seems a lot of schools just have one and then you are on your own. I think my DC would benefit from a few years dorms. DC agrees. TIA
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:BU does not require students to stay on campus for two years, but it guarantees housing for four years, so there’s no problem staying in campus housing.
BC is the same. Most stay on campus but they don’t have to.
I believe BC does require two years. Students would stay all four if they could...but some are only guaranteed three years.
They generally move off junior year and then back on campus senior year to get the best housing senior year.
Anonymous wrote:Here's a list of where 89%+ of students live on campus (so 3+ years on average):
https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rankings/most-on-campus
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UCLA - all 4 yrs but you start in a triple room
But they also count living in your fraternity or sorority house, right??? Otherwise none of those houses in Westwood would be able to sustain themselves….
Anonymous wrote:As a parent, I much prefer on-campus for at least 3 years. I don't want to deal with the BS and leases, and empty apartment over the summer, etc. Faulty balconies, etc. At my school a balcony at a shoddy apt building (newer build) fell with student overload...ugh
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:BU does not require students to stay on campus for two years, but it guarantees housing for four years, so there’s no problem staying in campus housing.
BC is the same. Most stay on campus but they don’t have to.
Anonymous wrote:Rice -- and it's residential college system is fantastic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UCLA - all 4 yrs but you start in a triple room
But they also count living in your fraternity or sorority house, right??? Otherwise none of those houses in Westwood would be able to sustain themselves….
Anonymous wrote:This was posted on another thread, and I think it's worth repeating and something to consider (ask about) when touring schools:
"Lining up housing for Sophomore year. Because of tight rental markets the process started immediately after winter break and it was clearly a source of stress. Finding roommates wasn't the issue, just chasing down leads on availability was difficult. Older DC had guaranteed housing all four years, so this caught us off guard."