Nooooooooooo. That was one of the best parts of BWR. I think it was a lot better in the all male because there wasn't any showmanship to peacock for women or drama because everyone was sleeping with each other. Just dudes being dudes.BWR is now coed for this upcoming year.
Nooooooooooo. That was one of the best parts of BWR. I think it was a lot better in the all male because there wasn't any showmanship to peacock for women or drama because everyone was sleeping with each other. Just dudes being dudes.
My best friends were on my floor freshman year. 33/37 were freshman on that floor and one of those 4 was the CA. Just a bunch of guys just figuring adulthood and college out. Tremendous amount of memories.
Only 9 of the 37 made it to sophomore year and all 9 graduated. All 9 lived a couple houses apart junior and senior year. Doors were always open and we were always at one house or the other. 5 of us were really close and we still have the same group chat going 10 years after starting it and we meet up regularly to hang out or go camping and stuff (in non pandemic times).
Damn I miss college
Amen. I lived in Friley all 4 years way back in the dark ages. Our house was 80% freshman the first year. In the sophomore year, only 20% of those folks returned to campus.Nooooooooooo. That was one of the best parts of BWR. I think it was a lot better in the all male because there wasn't any showmanship to peacock for women or drama because everyone was sleeping with each other. Just dudes being dudes.
My best friends were on my floor freshman year. 33/37 were freshman on that floor and one of those 4 was the CA. Just a bunch of guys just figuring adulthood and college out. Tremendous amount of memories.
Only 9 of the 37 made it to sophomore year and all 9 graduated. All 9 lived a couple houses apart junior and senior year. Doors were always open and we were always at one house or the other. 5 of us were really close and we still have the same group chat going 10 years after starting it and we meet up regularly to hang out or go camping and stuff (in non pandemic times).
Damn I miss college
I was in Friley my freshman year in 2015 and couldn't have had a better experience. It was close to food, the gym, all the restaurants, the lake, the bookstore. It's got multiple bus routes that pass it since it's kind of a main hub so it's easy to get anywhere in town from there as well.I'm super excited that my to-be senior in HS has applied and got accepted. (No surprise there, but still really cool as his mom and I met at Welch Ave Station.)
Anyway, he went to accept the offer today and they want $330. I assume that's all normal and it's a lost chunk of money if he decides over the senior year he wants to go elsewhere? So he should be fairly certain before sending the money.
The big reason he's wanting to do it asap is to get the best choice of housing. This is where I'm really looking for advice from you all. 1, I never lived in dorms and my wife hasn't for close to 30 years. So what's the pros and cons of dorm life and which ones should he and his buddies try for? I assume Friley so that you are in the middle of everything.
BWR is now coed for this upcoming year.
Nooooooooooo. That was one of the best parts of BWR. I think it was a lot better in the all male because there wasn't any showmanship to peacock for women or drama because everyone was sleeping with each other. Just dudes being dudes.
My best friends were on my floor freshman year. 33/37 were freshman on that floor and one of those 4 was the CA. Just a bunch of guys just figuring adulthood and college out. Tremendous amount of memories.
Only 9 of the 37 made it to sophomore year and all 9 graduated. All 9 lived a couple houses apart junior and senior year. Doors were always open and we were always at one house or the other. 5 of us were really close and we still have the same group chat going 10 years after starting it and we meet up regularly to hang out or go camping and stuff (in non pandemic times).
Damn I miss college
When were you in Friley? I was on 5th floor "Niles-Foster" in the 2015-2016 school yearI'm a more recent grad and agree that the "traditional" dorms are the way to go for freshman year. I lived in Friley as a freshman but moved to the Martin suites with 3 other friends for sophomore and junior year. You can't beat being close to everything when you live on campus.
The "forced socialization" of the traditional dorms like Friley is so important to the college experience--makes it easier to make friends, find people to eat and study with, and keeps you engaged in campus activities whether that's a party in the room next door, a game tournament in the common areas, or the ISU After Dark activities at the MU.
Also, yes Friley is a great location for engineering students--you do go all over campus as a freshman but I still had lots of classes on the west side of campus as an ag engineering student.
If only 9 made it to their sophomore year, that's a great reason to say that was a terrible approach.
BIL was an aero engineer...being in MWL would have been a huge waste of time each day getting to engineering, physics, and math (Carver) classes even as a freshman.
10 minute walk is a huge waste of time? Man, don't ever move to Europe...
I was an Aero. Son was a EE, daughter was Psych/CJ. I lived in Larch 2 years, son in Friley 2 years, daughter in Maple and then Freddy Court. So we were everywhere.
Freshman year doesn't matter where you live, because classes are all over the place. Later years, yeah heavily west side of campus (Black, Town) and prob more so now with Howe. But by the time he is a jr/sr probably will be off campus anyway.
I lived in Larch 2 years. Rode my bike a lot. Rougher in winter, but you're on break for half of that. Now you can take the bus anywhere too. Plus they have places to eat EVERYWHERE now, so no more going back to your dorm for lunch or anything unless you want to. There's nowhere bad to live. WHO you live with matters 100x more.
Man, if I won the lotto I think I'd move to Ames and sign up. Just go to classes, walk around campus, eat. Great retirement gig.
Small aside while enjoying reading this discussion --
It is interesting reading everybody's thoughts on the various merits and problems with different residence halls and communities on campus and in Ames. Same deal with what people think about the social aspects of the college experience, which is something I really never received in Ames.
I lived at home and commuted for 5.5 years. ISU was a commuter school to me.
So I never got most of these experiences because I was (1.) cheap, and boy did that save a lot of money over time and (2.) kind of antisocial. Just a nerd who needed his books and alone time.
That being said, marching band forced a lot of socialization on me, so it was not like I was somehow unconnected to campus or the community. Just came through different means.