Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Reading this post is giving me anxiety and I do not even have a dog in the fight (have boys and their colleges did random assignments of roommates).
Here is my question: For sororities and finding a roommate, if you are judged based on your Instagram account, how can you start over if you had a rough HS existence? I mean, let's say you did not have tons of friends so your IG does not show tons of pretty friends pics. Are you doomed in finding a roommate and heaven-forbid rushing a sorority?
The good part is that you almost never post on your grid anymore, it’s mostly just stories/reels. It’s not too late but they would want to build up their social network and posts.
Anonymous wrote:Reading this post is giving me anxiety and I do not even have a dog in the fight (have boys and their colleges did random assignments of roommates).
Here is my question: For sororities and finding a roommate, if you are judged based on your Instagram account, how can you start over if you had a rough HS existence? I mean, let's say you did not have tons of friends so your IG does not show tons of pretty friends pics. Are you doomed in finding a roommate and heaven-forbid rushing a sorority?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The whole social media roommate search process sounds awful, like a mini virtual version of sorority rush!
I was just talking to my DD about this. It definitely is easier for very outgoing kids. There was a questions on one of the pages here about whether the social media page reflects the personality of the student, if they show they have a lot of friends. A year or so ago, I remember reading on here about prepping your socials for rush and talked to a friend who has a daughter at a southern school. The advice was to have lots of posts with girlfriends.They said to make sure it wasn't the same friends in all the pics and don't include pics with boys unless it's a long-term boyfriend. Also, vacation photos were good, too. I definitely felt a lot of feelings about all of that. It's like LinkedIn, but for personality. A lot of it is curated and doesn't tell the whole story, but it's how a first impression is formed.
Y'all, we had it so much easier in the 90s.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ridiculous. They should go back to random for everyone the way it used to be.
+1. It's part of the college experience.
Anonymous wrote:Ridiculous. They should go back to random for everyone the way it used to be.
Anonymous wrote:The whole social media roommate search process sounds awful, like a mini virtual version of sorority rush!
Anonymous wrote:The whole social media roommate search process sounds awful, like a mini virtual version of sorority rush!
Anonymous wrote:This is concerning me. My kid is off to Brown in the Fall and we've heard nothing about roommate assignments/dorms, etc. Hope I haven't missed something!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A space does not have to be cohesive. They can pick a rug together but other than that…who cares? My daughter got her bedding, roommate got hers.
I do emphasize with the stress of this process for some girls. Absolutely.
A lot of girls care
Anonymous wrote:It would be great if someone compiled a list of how top schools handle freshman roommates. It really says a lot about the school.
Everyone here is so obsessed acting like experts and analyzing which school has a better econ department or sends more kids to Wall Street. I think how they handle freshman roommates is just as important (assuming the schools are relatively similar academically).
I think random is the only way to go. I was assigned a random roommate. Our neighbor walked in the first day and said "this is a disaster waiting to happen." Despite looking completely different we both grew up in similar socioeconomic backgrounds and with similar values of being easy-going and kind to others, so we got along great - didn't live together after that year but still keep in touch 30+ years later.