Mailing Addresses?

<p>I was given two different mailing addresses from my daughter for sending letters and packages. Could someone kindly let me know if these are correct, or if additional info should be added to the address to ensure delivery to the student?</p>

<p>For packages:</p>

<p><name of="" student="">
Bard College
30 Campus Road
Annandale-on-Hudson, NY 12504-5000</name></p>

<p>For letters:</p>

<p><name of="" student="">
Bard College
MSC P.O. Box <student’s mailbox="" #="">
Annandale-on-Hudson, NY 12504-5000</student’s></name></p>

<p>Thanks as always!</p>

<p>Those both are good. You definitely need the street address for some online shippers. Have fun putting together your first care package!!</p>

<p>Those are good. For letters, you can also just do (unless they changed the policy, which knowing bard, they haven’t):</p>

<p>Name
Bard College
30 Campus Rd.
Annandale-on-Hudson, NY 12504-5000</p>

<p>In the case that you don’t remember your kid’s PO box number, you can just do what’s above.</p>

<p>I actually sent letters to the wrong mailbox for an entire semester last year and the Bard PO people got them to the right person.</p>

<p>Thank you everyone! I wanted to double-check bec. I couldn’t quite believe that listing just the student’s name along with Bard’s Campus Rd address would be sufficient. But I guess that’s one benefit of going to a smaller college.</p>

<p>Gosh, L&T only has 1 more week to go after this week! My daughter says she really likes her teacher but is working hard on her paper. Also I thought it was nice that the teachers seem to make themselves easily available after class as my daughter was able to meet with the teacher on follow-up questions. Also only 15 students in her class, which appears to be the average for L&T classes - very nice!</p>

<p>L&T and FYSEM have strict 15-students-only rules. But really, most classes that have 20+ are looked at as being “big.” L&T professors are amazing. they’re kind of what I would describe as the parents of a college experience–they hold everyone’s hand, helping them through the process of “growing up” (into a college student) before letting them go to “real” college. L&T is still, even after only a year at Bard, the only class where I remember everyone in my class and the experience is still pretty vivid.</p>

<p>I forgot to add in my previous post that my daughter reports that “there are a lot of really smart people in my class.” My daughter graduated from a rigorous HS where there were also a lot of smart students. Not to say that she was the smartest student at her HS, but I thought her statement says a great deal about the caliber of students at Bard.</p>

<p>Glad things are going well. I remember my son being shocked (and delighted) at how hard he had to work in L&T. As well as with the caliber of his peers - let alone his absolute veneration of his L&T professor. He can’t wait to get back.</p>

<p>Same here.</p>

<p>D is crossing the days off her calendar, and it literally jumping with glee as August 28 nears.</p>