Anonymous wrote:My other Kid went to Texas. UT has no requirement to live on campus Freshman year. We spoiled him, but look at his "dorm":
https://www.americancampus.com/student-apartments/tx/austin/the-callaway-house-austin#gallery
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has your kid never been to sleepaway camp? Some of those accommodations are really shabby and threadbare. I'm UMC and I say GOOD. It's a safe way for them to know they're starting to be on their own, and mommy and daddy aren't going to be there to make everything all nice.
Also, to worry about your college-age son rolling off his bed is a bit infantilizing.
Not a lot of families send their kids to sleepaway camp in this area. We're not in NY.
What? Almost every kid I know went to sleep away camp.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just dropped off my kid at school. The university overenrolled kids for the past couple years. I hear the complaints about tiny dorm rooms with no AC and I am with you in spirit.
However, my kid was assigned a dorm room with 7 other roommates. It was previously a lounge converted into a dorm room. 8 kids in a college dorm room is ridiculous. It's not summer camp.
I'm sorry to hear about ting dorm rooms for your kids. It is absolutely insane.
What school?
Anonymous wrote:The trick is accepting quickly and making a housing deposit…at least that’s how it worked at my kid’s flagship. They got into the new all-suite dorm.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just dropped off my kid at school. The university overenrolled kids for the past couple years. I hear the complaints about tiny dorm rooms with no AC and I am with you in spirit.
However, my kid was assigned a dorm room with 7 other roommates. It was previously a lounge converted into a dorm room. 8 kids in a college dorm room is ridiculous. It's not summer camp.
I'm sorry to hear about ting dorm rooms for your kids. It is absolutely insane.
What school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has your kid never been to sleepaway camp? Some of those accommodations are really shabby and threadbare. I'm UMC and I say GOOD. It's a safe way for them to know they're starting to be on their own, and mommy and daddy aren't going to be there to make everything all nice.
Also, to worry about your college-age son rolling off his bed is a bit infantilizing.
Not a lot of families send their kids to sleepaway camp in this area. We're not in NY.
Anonymous wrote:FFS, folks. Grow up.
During my entire freshman year, I lived in a single that was turned into a double. We had bunk beds. It was miserably cramped. The shower was disgusting. It was dark and your feet sunk into the rotting concrete when you stepped inside. It was in the basement of a century old dorm at a very prestigious liberal arts college.
Why do your little snowflakes need their own room, their own bathroom, their nice comfy double bed, all the cozies and tidiness and oomphieness of home when they are in college?? This is real life. Mommy and Daddy are paying now, but not forever (unless you suck at parenting), so start getting used to some deprivations, kiddos.
My kid's dorm room is so small, she is supposed to have bunk beds, but she refuses, so she and her roommate are working out a floor plan so they can squeeze two twin beds in their. One of them is going to put her desk in the hall because she doesn't study at a desk.
Yeah, $80k for this!! Whine away, parents. This is college as it's always been and likely always will be.
Anonymous wrote:
I'm a foreigner who has never had to live in a dorm (students either commute from home or rent apartments), and I do not encourage my kids to apply somewhere with a high risk of getting a tiny dysfunctional space. My oldest just moved into a nice single at GW... the doubles are a bit cramped, but the dorms are overall on the nicer side - renovated, A/C, amenities, etc. I am NOT paying these American prices for my kids to get poor quality sleep for 4 years. Comfort matters. And we live in a tiny, old house! But it's still comfortable and well laid-out.
I entirely reject the notion that discomfort is "part of the college experience". Not at those prices.
Anonymous wrote:I just dropped off my kid at school. The university overenrolled kids for the past couple years. I hear the complaints about tiny dorm rooms with no AC and I am with you in spirit.
However, my kid was assigned a dorm room with 7 other roommates. It was previously a lounge converted into a dorm room. 8 kids in a college dorm room is ridiculous. It's not summer camp.
I'm sorry to hear about ting dorm rooms for your kids. It is absolutely insane.
Anonymous wrote:My DD’s dorm room freshman year was smaller than her horse’s stall.