<p>Hi all, I'm a current freshman and trying to figure out where I should apply to live for next year. </p>
<p>A friend and I are thinking about moving off-campus, but I still would be perfectly fine with one of the high rises. I also definitely want to look into the radian, but apparently it's muyyy muy caro. However, if it's really worth it, my parents will probably not mind paying...I've heard that it's actually not much more than the high rises but I'm not sure how true that is.</p>
<p>Any advice from upperclassmen? Is sophomore year too soon to move off campus?</p>
<p>The high rises are very hard to get into. Maybe try applying to a residential program within one of them, it’s a good way to get into a high rise.
Honestly the only thing I hate about Penn is the housing process. It is a major pain.</p>
<p>@Poeme: I got an email about the housing stuff recently. One of the high rises has a few residential programs that even require an interview. Can you list what sort of questions they usually ask. Applying for the high rises is one of my options right now.</p>
<p>An interview for a residential program? I’ve absolutely never heard of that…none of them on the website for housing even say that an interview is required. Could you find where it says this?</p>
<p>And 45 Percenter, I’m sure Princeton Dreams is a student at both and just teleports him/herself back and forth between schools. Makes sense for someone intelligent enough to get into schools like Stanford, Columbia, and Penn :)</p>