<p>At least at Oxford you couldn’t. I don’t believe it’s possible at the Atlanta campus either [Undergraduate</a> Housing :: Info for Incoming First-Year Students](<a href=“Residence Life and Housing Operations | Emory University | Atlanta GA ”>Residence Life and Housing Operations | Emory University | Atlanta GA )</p>
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Choosing Your Residence Hall
As a first-year student, you do not have the option to choose a specific building as we make assignments with the goal to create a well-rounded and diverse community of students. You do however, have the option to let us know your preference for the type of hall and floor you are assigned to; we will honor these preferences as we are able. Regardless of which residence hall you are assigned, your first year at Emory is sure to be a memorable one.
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<p>You can however request a living/learning community which are in the nicer dorms
iving-Learning Communities
To help us better understand your interests and to help you start thinking critically about your first year, we ask incoming first-year students to fill out the following questionnaire. This questionnaire asks about your academic interests, extracurricular and program interests, and goals you have for your first year. You may also indicate your interest in specific living-learning communities through this questionnaire. Please budget between 15-20 minutes to complete this survey. Questions may be directed to Ryan Roche at <a href=“mailto:ryan.roche@emory.edu ”>ryan.roche@emory.edu</a>.
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<p>I’d recommend doing the LLC option. I’ve only been to the “sustainability” dorm and was underwhelmed by its intensity of implementation (bias alert: I’m a somewhat stereotypical environmental science major), so even if your daughter isn’t big on the whole green movement, she’d be able to fit in fine.</p>