ConnHuskBask
Shut Em Down!
- Joined
- Aug 27, 2011
- Messages
- 9,114
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I'm still working on 40K+ students with only 8K beds. Big beds?@mavblues just ethered cougar high.
A lot of commuters?I'm still working on 40K+ students with only 8K beds. Big beds?
I'm still working on 40K+ students with only 8K beds. Big beds?
I'm still working on 40K+ students with only 8K beds. Big beds?
Dude is half right (is that a record). TV will want BYU, and UH is likely critical to getting Texas to extend the GOR (something TV is going to want for their half a billion dollars. Problem is that you still need the Non-Texas Schools to sign off as well as the Leftover 8. To do that you need better schools and schools that are not tied to UT.
That means 14. Sounds like we are at least halfway there inside the room, if any of this has a shred of truth to it.
I wouldn't consider an off-campus apartment to be commuting, but I'm not sure how the school defines it. I moved off-campus after two years, but to an apartment behind East and then to Willington Oaks, and I certainly never felt like a commuter.
If you have to drive (or take public transit), that's commuting in my mind. If you live "off campus" but are still walking distance, while that's not classified as "on campus" it's still not commuting imo.
I attended the Groton-Avery Point campus and then Storrs for 3 years. Avery Point, and I think all other UConn campuses at the time, didn't have on-campus housing so everyone lived off campus and commuted, some from home and others from rental housing. To me, that was a true commuting environment. You drove to school, went to class, and then drove home.Agreed. I'd even say that taking the university shuttle bus system is "on campus". Living with your mom and dad? That's commuting. I do think it matters to the college experience. Even schools like BU or Northeastern really will never generate the sense of togetherness that exists with students living together on campus or in a college town with no other school.
I snapped. Thanks for bringing me back. Whew!Step away from the edge for a second...do you realize you are actually making statements based on tweets and a article written by someone who seriously needs to be committed for a psych eval?
I attended the Groton-Avery Point campus and then Storrs for 3 years. Avery Point, and I think all other UConn campuses at the time, didn't have on-campus housing so everyone lived off campus and commuted, some from home and others from rental housing. To me, that was a true commuting environment. You drove to school, went to class, and then drove home.
When I transferred to Storrs, I lived in a dorm for one year and then moved off campus to Walden Apartments my last 2 years. I don't consider myself a commuter during those last two years even though I was driving 3-4 miles to campus every day. Why? Because I had made a lot of friends at my dorm and still hung out with those guys, sometimes at the dorm, when I wasn't in class.
Agreed. I'd even say that taking the university shuttle bus system is "on campus". Living with your mom and dad? That's commuting. I do think it matters to the college experience. Even schools like BU or Northeastern really will never generate the sense of togetherness that exists with students living together on campus or in a college town with no other school.
Why do you say that about BU when the vast majority of students there do not come from the area?
If you say that about BU, you have to say it about all city schools, including Harvard, Yale, New York U., U Chicago, U Pittsburgh, U Pennsylvania, Georgetown and George Washington, etc. All of these schools have urban campuses with the vast majority of students living in dorms or off campus apartments just like BU.
Are you saying only rural schools experience "togetherness?" Because I've lived on an urban campus and a rural campus, and it's not very different just because the vast majority of the students are not commuting.
The education received at UConn's five branches is essentially the same as received at Storrs. But as I googled, it did appear that going to a commuter campus leaves a different college experience.
If you have to drive (or take public transit), that's commuting in my mind. If you live "off campus" but are still walking distance, while that's not classified as "on campus" it's still not commuting imo.
BU has changed some and may not deserve my ire. Harvard and Yale have a very distinct campuses, with quads and large areas all within campus. BU back when I went to college (at UConn) was a long strip of more or less office buildings, and the students rode the Green Line from one end to the other. The BU students I knew lived in apartments mixed with workers and students of other schools. I don't know the other campuses well enough. Certainly PC and BC have discreet campuses. I'm told Cincinnati does as well.
BU has changed some and may not deserve my ire. Harvard and Yale have a very distinct campuses, with quads and large areas all within campus. BU back when I went to college (at UConn) was a long strip of more or less office buildings, and the students rode the Green Line from one end to the other. The BU students I knew lived in apartments mixed with workers and students of other schools. I don't know the other campuses well enough. Certainly PC and BC have discreet campuses. I'm told Cincinnati does as well.
Exactly. Carriage House, Celeron etc are all off campus but their sole (let's say 90%) purpose is to provide housing for UConn students. They are just an extension of the college environment. This is completely different from a BU student living in an apartment building in back bay or a Temple student living in center city. Even if they're living with classmates, the environment is separate and unique.Yes, and that's the point about "city schools". Commuting a short distance from housing in a college town that is mostly used by students is really not much different than living on campus. For the city schools its different, and there is less of a college town feel in that off campus housing.
I drove about 1.5 miles to law school, but anywhere you lived in Lawrence, KS, you were at KU. You can't escape it.
Not what I experienced at BU. Office buildings? I mean, there were no office buildings. The school was mainly the old college buildings west of Kenmore Square. Those are really old buildings from the birth of the university. All the new buildings, like engineering, communications, sciences, etc., look exactly like the new buildings you see n any college campuses. If there is anything weird or ugly about BU, it is only the mega-dorms. Warren Towers, West Campus.
What people miss about BU as they drive down Commonwealth past the solid old buildings is that behind there there are roads packed with brownstones and even an old castle. These are university owned. There is even some green space. It has been this way since the 1980s when I went there. But all those brownstones are either owned by the university for classes (I took classes in brownstones!) or else they serve as student housing. The students that rode the green line were off-campus housing students. Obviously, you don't need to ever get on a train once you are on campus. The only exception to this is for students who attend the College of General Studies, which is closer to West Campus.
Mayor Menino pushed many of Boston's universities in the 90's to build on-campus housing to take pressure off of the residential rental market (and to separate college Boston from professional Boston). Last I head, Boston U went from 33% on campus housing to 75%, Northeastern went from 25% to about 67% and even colleges like Emerson built dorms and UMass-Boston will be doing the same next year. BU and Northeastern defiantly have a 'campus' or community feel within the city. BC, as is is less urban, already had that. Going to an urban college is vastly different than going to UConn; but, it is still a college experience and those are not commuter schools like Bunker Hill CC. I've never been to U Houston, do no idea if it is more like an urban college or a community college. I have been to downtown Houston though and I woud take living in downtown Boston and many other cities over Houston any day. Downtown Houston clears out faster that Hartford did on non Whaler & Husky night in February back in the '90's.
Exactly. Carriage House, Celeron etc are all off campus but their sole (let's say 90%) purpose is to provide housing for UConn students. They are just an extension of the college environment. This is completely different from a BU student living in an apartment building in back bay or a Temple student living in center city. Even if they're living with classmates, the environment is separate and unique.
I hope you hacked into the Big 12's computers and found that.