Anonymous wrote:My son attends Grinnell where the expectation is for students to live in college housing all four years. Obviously there are a few exceptions (the two kids he knows who are actually from Grinnell could live at home - both chose not to, married students, etc) but 4 years on campus was a big selling point IMO.
I don’t think faculty knock on the door but I know if you miss 2 classes in a row the professor will text/email/call to see what’s going on.
Plus being on campus - and the associated dining privileges mean students have access to food. Grinnell has students who depend on the school for food and thankfully they dont get kicked out of the dorms to make room for the first years.
The dorms provide a community and, especially for students who are poor, a safety net.
Anonymous wrote:My son attends Grinnell where the expectation is for students to live in college housing all four years. Obviously there are a few exceptions (the two kids he knows who are actually from Grinnell could live at home - both chose not to, married students, etc) but 4 years on campus was a big selling point IMO.
I don’t think faculty knock on the door but I know if you miss 2 classes in a row the professor will text/email/call to see what’s going on.
Plus being on campus - and the associated dining privileges mean students have access to food. Grinnell has students who depend on the school for food and thankfully they dont get kicked out of the dorms to make room for the first years.
The dorms provide a community and, especially for students who are poor, a safety net.
Anonymous wrote:My son attends Grinnell where the expectation is for students to live in college housing all four years. Obviously there are a few exceptions (the two kids he knows who are actually from Grinnell could live at home - both chose not to, married students, etc) but 4 years on campus was a big selling point IMO.
I don’t think faculty knock on the door but I know if you miss 2 classes in a row the professor will text/email/call to see what’s going on.
Plus being on campus - and the associated dining privileges mean students have access to food. Grinnell has students who depend on the school for food and thankfully they dont get kicked out of the dorms to make room for the first years.
The dorms provide a community and, especially for students who are poor, a safety net.
Anonymous wrote:Here is an article with some of the stats to back up OP's position.
https://www.eab.com/daily-briefing/2015/09/01/why-living-on-campus-is-good-for-students
Anonymous wrote:My DD moved into an apartment complex near her public university that runs constant shuttles to campus (after freshman year on campus). She had no drop in grades. She enjoyed cooking her own food, having an entire bedroom to herself, being able to speak in a normal speaking voice after 11 pm, and sleeping in a full bed instead of in a lofted twin like a 7 year old boy. When she turns 21, I'm sure she'll enjoy being able to have an adult beverage without being written up by an RA.
Living in a dorm all four years is probably fine if you live in a residential college where everyone does it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After sophomore year they will insist that everyone is moving out. They can't possibly live in a dorm or campus apartment. It will be cheaper. The will work to help pay for it. Don't buy any of this. Your student's chances of persisting to graduation drop off a cliff, statistically, once they move off campus. I know. I'm a dinosaur. Flame away. It's the truth.
#PublicUniversityProblems
Public universities have too many kids, too few dorms, the gap between bottom 20% and top 20% is vast, and there are too few faculty to have face-to-face interaction with struggling kids.
At a public U if you're goofing off you can EASILY find other goofs to clown around with. Miss class for months? Nobody cares. Fail all your classes? Nobody cares. Go home and never come back? Nobody cares.
At decent privates you ditch one class everyone knows. Your door is getting knocked on by faculty. Your classmates are going to bother you. You'll be seen as abnormal. You can't fly under the radar at a decent private.
This was untrue at Harvard.
It’s untrue at every college in the country. I don’t know what PP is smoking.
it is probably not untrue at that special needs college in Florida.
I keep hoping the PP will come back to explain which college, exactly, had faculty who went to some kid's door because the kid decided to "ditch one class." I can't imagine what that would look like. None of my professors EVER came anywhere near my door, on campus or off. This was Harvard. My profs had better things to do with their time than go to some undergrad's door to nag about missing class.
I expect my ds's profs to be superior in their fields, and to be actively writing/researching. It isn't their job to look after my kid, who is mature enough to get himself to class.
Anonymous wrote:Nobody lives on campus through senior year.
Anonymous wrote:Nobody lives on campus through senior year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After sophomore year they will insist that everyone is moving out. They can't possibly live in a dorm or campus apartment. It will be cheaper. The will work to help pay for it. Don't buy any of this. Your student's chances of persisting to graduation drop off a cliff, statistically, once they move off campus. I know. I'm a dinosaur. Flame away. It's the truth.
#PublicUniversityProblems
Public universities have too many kids, too few dorms, the gap between bottom 20% and top 20% is vast, and there are too few faculty to have face-to-face interaction with struggling kids.
At a public U if you're goofing off you can EASILY find other goofs to clown around with. Miss class for months? Nobody cares. Fail all your classes? Nobody cares. Go home and never come back? Nobody cares.
At decent privates you ditch one class everyone knows. Your door is getting knocked on by faculty. Your classmates are going to bother you. You'll be seen as abnormal. You can't fly under the radar at a decent private.
This was untrue at Harvard.
It’s untrue at every college in the country. I don’t know what PP is smoking.
it is probably not untrue at that special needs college in Florida.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After sophomore year they will insist that everyone is moving out. They can't possibly live in a dorm or campus apartment. It will be cheaper. The will work to help pay for it. Don't buy any of this. Your student's chances of persisting to graduation drop off a cliff, statistically, once they move off campus. I know. I'm a dinosaur. Flame away. It's the truth.
#PublicUniversityProblems
Public universities have too many kids, too few dorms, the gap between bottom 20% and top 20% is vast, and there are too few faculty to have face-to-face interaction with struggling kids.
At a public U if you're goofing off you can EASILY find other goofs to clown around with. Miss class for months? Nobody cares. Fail all your classes? Nobody cares. Go home and never come back? Nobody cares.
At decent privates you ditch one class everyone knows. Your door is getting knocked on by faculty. Your classmates are going to bother you. You'll be seen as abnormal. You can't fly under the radar at a decent private.
This was untrue at Harvard.
It’s untrue at every college in the country. I don’t know what PP is smoking.