URL: http://www.dailytarheel.com/index.php/article/2011/11/4ed41fd56ec28
Current Date: Thu, 24 May 2012 08:05:08 -0400
As if there weren’t enough freshmen on South Campus already.
Next year, housing officials will stop reserving space for freshmen on North Campus, pushing 200 to 250 additional freshmen to South Campus in an effort to keep older students from moving off campus.
The move will not forbid freshmen from living on North Campus but represents a substantive change in the University’s housing policy.
Officials made the decision after a survey conducted a month ago indicated that more non-freshmen would be inclined to live on campus if North Campus rooms were more readily available, said Rick Bradley, assistant director of housing assignments and communication.
The University now has 434 empty beds, which cost about $2.4 million in wasted space, Bradley said.
“We market our spaces to increase demand,” he said. “We want to increase occupancy primarily for sophomores and juniors.”
The University traditionally reserves space on North Campus for a portion of the freshmen class, Bradley said. About 8,500 students live on campus, and 20 percent of the 3,300 freshmen live on North Campus.
“Because we were holding space for (freshmen), we were probably having upperclassmen moving off campus,” Bradley said. “We’re hoping that now, more will want to stay on North Campus.”
Bradley said 165 of the 434 empty beds are on North Campus. Housing officials hope to fill those spaces with upperclassmen and fill the additional 208 beds on South Campus with freshmen.
Freshmen who participate in living-learning communities or the honors program will still be able to live on North Campus, Bradley said. Disabled students will also be able to live on North Campus according to their needs.
Some of the move’s rationale relates to the freshmen class dynamic, officials said.
“We encourage (freshmen) to live on South Campus because that’s where most of their class is housed,” said Larry Hicks, director of housing and residential education.
Encouraging freshmen to live on one side of the campus is similar to Duke University’s housing policy, which requires freshmen to live on East Campus.
“The class identity for students is much higher because they share experiences like bus routes and dining rooms,” said Joe Gonzalez, associate dean of housing services at Duke, where students are required to live on campus until the end of their junior year.
Some UNC freshmen who live on South Campus said it has enhanced their experience.
South Campus residence halls include Morrison, Ehringhaus, Craige, Hinton James, Koury, Hardin, Horton, and Craige North.
“I like living on South Campus, because I know everyone’s in the same boat as me,” said freshman Kelly Pope.
“If I lived on North Campus, it would be overwhelming because I’d be surrounded by upperclassmen who knew what they were doing.”
Nestor Ramirez, a UNC senior and admissions ambassador, said the move could have negative impacts on the way the admissions office markets the University.
“It will seem like freshmen are being confined to one space,” he said.
And some upperclassmen said the change in policy might not affect their decision to move off campus.
“I cook a lot, so I wanted my own kitchen, and I wanted my own room,” junior Maria Marshall said.
Contact the University Editor at university@dailytarheel.com.
Do you think fracking can be done safely?
“If I lived on North Campus, it would be overwhelming because I’d be surrounded by upperclassmen who knew what they were doing.”
lol, correction:
“If I lived on North Campus, it would be beneficial to me because I’d be surrounded by upperclassmen who knew what they were doing.”
@Zach
Agreed. I spent my freshman year on N. Campus and had a lot of great mentors as a result.
Since when is class identity more important than a common Carolina identity?
As someone who lived in North Campus three years, I absolutely loved it. I felt like the people in Everett were always friendly and it felt like a real community of 30 people. I moved to Aycock (another north campus dorm) for a bigger kitchen and slightly bigger rooms. As a freshman, I was able to get senior to walk me to my classes and tell me what places to avoid on Franklin.
I really don’t like south campus dorms. They are too far away from the main part of campus, and they are only convenient for men’s basketball games and visiting SASB. Franklin is a 10 minute walk from any of the north campus dorms, instead of a 20 minute hustle from HoJo or Craig North.
I think the university should take a good look at this policy before they change it. Maybe advertise south campus dorms to freshman more than they currently do. But don’t reduce north campus housing for freshman- It really made a difference for me and I’m sure it’ll make a difference for other freshman, too.
This is a good idea.
I lived in E-Haus my freshman year and and Carmichael sophomore year, only to live off campus jr and sr year.
Nothing beats watching underclassmen running up the stairs in a stricken panic in an attempt to avoid the RA at all costs. I’ve been there. It’s a formative experience all freshman should be exposed to.
Upperclassmen move off campus because they don’t want to pay almost $700/mo. for a shared room, dirty bathroom, and no kitchen.
As someone who lived on north campus all 4 years, first in Lewis then in Old East, I can tell you a big reason I did not move off campus is because I was already living on north from day 1.
If you already have 165 north campus rooms sitting open, perhaps you should simply advertise them better rather than change a decades old policy.
Another option would be to eliminate the heterophobic policy demanding same sex roommates. That would solve your capacity problems in a heartbeat.
I am IN FAVOR of housing’s move. Universities that place freshmen in residential colleges with other freshmen consistently have higher retention rates (Yale, Amherst, Notre Dame). Freshmen living with freshmen brings good things! I would like to eventually see all freshmen on one part of campus. It is about time the polarity between South Campus, North Campus, and Granville goes away.
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