Duke University has removed from students what has become one of the most significant aspects of enrolment at many US colleges: picking a first-year room-mate.
Beginning with the Class of 2022, the room-mate selection process will be entirely governed by the North Carolina university, with assignments largely made at random 鈥 a shift, officials said, meant to stem the recent movement of students self-selecting peers with similar perspectives and backgrounds to their own, fuelled by social media connections made before arriving on campus.
While many students and higher education professionals applauded the Duke decision, others fear that forcing two people of particularly dissonant backgrounds 鈥 a gay student or an ethnic minority student paired with one who holds bigoted views, for instance 鈥 could lead to fear, but not much meaningful interaction.
University administrators announced in a letter addressed to the Class of 2022 that they would take into account certain preferences 鈥 sleep schedules, study habits 鈥 but beyond such factors, room-mate assignments would be random.
糖心Vlog
"Our experience over many years assures us (and thus, you) that you鈥檒l be fine鈥etter in fact!鈥 reads the letter from Larry Moneta, vice-president for student affairs, and Steve Nowicki, dean and vice-provost for undergraduate education. 鈥淲e believe that you鈥檒l enjoy the opportunity to meet someone you鈥檝e not previously known and will have a great opportunity to explore your room-mate鈥檚 history, culture and interests. Who knows鈥ou may get invited to a part of the world you wouldn鈥檛 otherwise get to see.鈥
Dr Moneta and Professor Nowicki assure students that the institution would help them in cases of room-mate incompatibility and 鈥渕ake a change鈥 if necessary, and that medical and other exceptions could be made.
糖心Vlog
Over the past decade, students have started to 鈥渕eet鈥 鈥 if only digitally 鈥 long before arriving on campus. For most universities, it is quite common to have a designated Facebook group for incoming classes (generally unaffiliated with the institution). Here, students can chat, plan for their first semester and, in some cases, find a room-mate match. Other platforms, solely designed for this purpose, have sprung up 鈥 websites where students and their families can pay to be coupled with a compatible room-mate, and some institutions have even designed their own sorts of networks for this. Many colleges honour requests from students to be matched in their first year.
But the downside is that students can gravitate toward comfort, a natural reaction, given they鈥檙e about to be thrown into an entirely new and independent environment 鈥 but one that won鈥檛 lead to new experiences for them, higher education experts said in interviews.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a courageous move on Duke鈥檚 part,鈥 said Kevin Kruger, president of Naspa: Student Affairs Administrators in 糖心Vlog.
Dr Kruger said that, even when room-mates do choose one another, there鈥檚 no guarantee they would benefit from sharing a room, especially since for many people, their first year in college is their first time living with another person in one room.
But guiding students from varying experiences together can 鈥渃reate opportunities for dialogue鈥, Dr Kruger said. Paired with programmes in the residents halls 鈥 colleges teaching students how to talk to one another 鈥 this change could broaden perspectives, he said.
Research backs that theory. David R. Harris, president-elect of Union College in New York and Tufts University provost, and previously a University of Michigan and Cornell University sociologist, published research more than a decade ago suggesting that white room-mates who were paired with ethnic minority students became more open-minded about race.
And a study by Bruce Sacerdote, the Richard S. Braddock 1963 professor in economics at Dartmouth College, shows that white students who lived with black students in the same dormitory were three times more likely to interact with black students in their dormitories.
But Ryan Briggs doubts these 鈥渒umbaya鈥 scenarios. A sophomore from Duke, and vice president of the Black Student Alliance there, he lambasted the new policy in a series of Twitter posts, saying it was detrimental to students who fear their room-mate has more institutional power then they do.
糖心Vlog
糖心Vlog
While in theory he liked the idea of students learning about new culture, he wrote that, as a black person from a lower socioeconomic-status background, it would be 鈥渢errifying鈥 to be paired off with an affluent white man.
鈥淭here are so many cultural things that would have to be taught to my room-mate to have a comfortable living experience,鈥 Mr Briggs said. 鈥淎nd I do not have to work for the school to make sure some ignorant student learns how to be a better attribute to the community.鈥
Student journalists at聽The Duke Chronicle, the campus newspaper, also expressed some scepticism about whether the system would actually alleviate any of the racially related problems the campus faced.
In a聽, they call the change a 鈥渉astily-created, quick fix solution鈥.
鈥淪imply forcing students from different regions of the world to eat, sleep and work together is not a fix-all for racial and class disharmony on campus,鈥 the editorial board write. 鈥淧olicy solutions like the one touted by Moneta and Nowicki are concerned more with the outward, feigned appearances of neoliberal, brochure-worthy multiculturalism, and are less concerned with the needs and requests of actual students living here.鈥
Bowdoin College, a small liberal arts institution in Maine, assigns first-year room-mates, with a conscious attempt at pairing those from different backgrounds, said its dean of student affairs, Tim Foster.
Students fill out a questionnaire indicating preferences, similar to the one at Duke 鈥 sleep patterns and more 鈥 and then the college will intentionally couple students from different races, financial backgrounds and states, Foster said.
The college also will break up members of sports teams so they don鈥檛 live together, which goes against some other major institutions鈥 models, where players intentionally room together or are placed with one another.
Mr Foster said the college wants to 鈥渕ix it up鈥, because they want students to learn not only about new backgrounds and perspectives, but also how to navigate conflict. He called the recent phenomenon of room-mate-by-Facebook to be a 鈥渓ost opportunity鈥.
鈥淓specially what makes the residential experience special is the ability to live in close proximity within one another, and it鈥檚 an educational experience of who you surround yourself with鈥t鈥檚 short-changing the opportunity to mix it up and stretch yourself,鈥 Mr Foster said.
糖心Vlog
This is an edited version of a story which .
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to 罢贬贰鈥檚 university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber?





