Difference between revisions of "Dorm room"

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(→‎What you get: starting with the class of 08, first years can have lofts)
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* Ethernet port and hub.
 
* Ethernet port and hub.
  
And that's pretty much it. Somehow, though, these few items manage to take up much of the available floor space. To rectify this, second-year students are given the privilege of building a loft, which is essentially a bunk bed with no bottom bunk. Using the cleared space, you might set up a desk, some foof chairs, a couch, bookshelf, etc. These lofts can be purchased at Maryville's hardware store or bought from previous students, sometimes for as little as a [http://www.xanga.com/Andy753421/269155562/item.html garden gnome].
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And that's pretty much it. Somehow, though, these few items manage to take up much of the available floor space. To rectify this, students are given the privilege of building a loft, which is essentially a bunk bed with no bottom bunk. Using the cleared space, you might set up a desk, some foof chairs, a couch, bookshelf, etc. These lofts can be purchased at Maryville's hardware store or bought from previous students, sometimes for as little as a [http://www.xanga.com/Andy753421/269155562/item.html garden gnome].
 
 
No known reason has been given from anyone in charge about why only second-year students can build lofts. If I had to guess, I'd say *no one* knows, but everyone continues to follow the rule anyway. Perhaps it's because it reduces congestion on move-in days. Or maybe because first-years are seen as too unfamiliar with dorm living to organize their rooms so complexly right off the bat—but then why disallow it all year long? Perhaps we can get this rule changed.
 
  
 
==What you should bring==
 
==What you should bring==

Revision as of 23:46, 7 July 2006

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A "typical" first-year's dorm room

Each pair of Missouri Academy students is given a room inside the four-story residential hall Cooper Hall. The room's dimensions are listed as (fill this in) x (fill this in), but they vary to a sufficient degree that you shouldn't build anything according to those specifications. It is recommend that you call the Academy office and request dimensions for a specific room rather than "guesstimating."

What you get

Every room comes equipped, by default, with the following items:

  • Two beds.
  • A desk that occupies the entire back wall and the space between your bed and wall
  • A closet and dresser
  • Ethernet port and hub.

And that's pretty much it. Somehow, though, these few items manage to take up much of the available floor space. To rectify this, students are given the privilege of building a loft, which is essentially a bunk bed with no bottom bunk. Using the cleared space, you might set up a desk, some foof chairs, a couch, bookshelf, etc. These lofts can be purchased at Maryville's hardware store or bought from previous students, sometimes for as little as a garden gnome.

What you should bring

Most people would agree that the following things are necessary:

  • A mini-refrigerator - Unless you plan on eating in the Union all of the time, this is essential. And you can't go to the Union at 1:00 AM, or during study hours. The Station, an on-campus convenience store which allows purchases with Aladine, sells many take-home food items that must be refrigerated to be safely eaten. Also consider the problems of storing milk for cereal and chilling sodas (though during the winter the space between the window and screen can produce very frosty drinks).
  • A printer - Printing to the school printers costs $0.10 per page, which can become expensive when you're printing multiple drafts of a paper or printing smaller assignments frequently.
  • Ethernet cable - If you plan on bringing your own computer and want to connect to the network, bring some cat5.
  • A fan - It's uncomfortably hot in the rooms August-October and May, as they lack air conditioning. Fans don't solve the problem completely, but they helped me (Mpnolan) at least fall asleep.

Issues

Roommates

Some students find being around another person all of the time very hard to adjust to. The Academy tries to help this problem by giving each student a short interests survey when signing up to make matches more bearable. But even if you admire your roommate, being around them all of the time can be frustrating.

One thing to do is to plan your class schedules so that, as often as possible, when one person is in class the other is out. This should give 3-4 hours of solo time per day. There are also quiet places in Ownes Library and the second and third floors of the Union.

Noise

The room's walls are practically paper-thin and if someone is talking in the next room, you'll hear it.

If you end up next to a chaotic sleeper who tosses and turns in the night, the wall will suddenly bulge out at you late at night and probably startle you.

External links