<p>Is it possible at most schools for Freshmen to elect suite style living? LIke an apartment shared by more than two people or is that usually reserved or is it something you don't choose and are just put in?</p>
<p>At the school I'll be going to, suite style rooms are reserved for scholarship students, kids with high GPAs, and community involvement. That said, freshman can get them. They have to apply like everyone else, and the school decides if they qualify for those dorms.</p>
<p>As for APARTMENTS, the on-campus ones are reserved for upperclassmen.</p>
<p>During a campus visit and tour of dorms at UTexas I brought up the question of suites. The advisor said that to acquire a suite all one must do is request one (at least for a good chance).</p>
<p>it really depends on the school. at my school some dorms are suite-style, some corridor, some suite style w a kitchen and some are apartments. the apartments are for upperclassmen w a gpa requirement but the others are for all undergrads.</p>
<p>^ Depends on the college.</p>
<p>I know UCI's dorms are mostly double rooms, triple and singles.</p>
<p>Upper classmen get apartments and such</p>
<p>but none are in suite style</p>
<p>Yup...depends on the school. At my school there's mostly regular corridor-style dorms. There's only two suite-style dorms where underclassmen can live, and in one of the dorms it's just one suite in the building where underclassmen can live. The rest of it is reserved for upperclassmen. And btw suite style living is not the same thing as an apartment.</p>
<p>Depends on the school. In my school they made a whole bunch of new suites and they are avaliable to anyone, freshman or graduate, but its on a first come first serve bases.</p>
<p>My school has two buildings reserved for freshmen. One is suite-style (very nice :)) and one is community-style. In that same complex, they have another suite-style reserved for returning students and another community-style that is open for anyone. Also, there are a couple other buildings on campus that are suite-style but I think one is reserved for upperclassmen and the other is open to anyone.</p>