ajrwdwgirl
Premium Member
That's what they have here....the housing lotteries. Although here, it's a waiting list in some cases, and there are some for student housing, and some just for regular standard housing. The house we are in now was a lottery system. We had been on a waiting list system for 3 years and were still at the very bottom of the list. You couldn't really get a place from the list unless you had been on the list for decades, and the majority of apartments and houses that weren't associated with a list weren't affordable. We had gone to every bank there was for mortgages. My husband is an engineer, but since I'm a foreigner and was still learning Dutch, I couldn't work fulltime. Unless you had 2 full time workers, you couldn't get a mortgage for anything more than a one bedroom apartment in a bad part of town. And student housing pretty much works the same way....you pay an initial fee to get on the list for housing in a particular university city. E's is probably one of the easiest ones to get into, because it's less desireable. It's not like most university cities....there's not much of a night life there, not much to do. Students don't go to Wageningen for the parties...they go because it's the place that offers their major. This is why it's also known as the "nerd" school. I didn't know this until I was talking with someone and they asked if E knew what she was going to do for college and I said she was going to Wageningen, and she said "Oh that's the nerd school." which totally makes sesne....that fits well with E. And I asked E about it and she said totally, yes...everyone knows it's the nerd school. People who like to party won't go there....they want to go to like...Amsterdam, or Utrecht. You only go to Wageningen if you are serious about school and don't care about the options for parties. Then when she went for an open day, the tour guide was showing the kids the biotech and molecular life sciences building and was saying that was where all the REALLY nerdy people were. And when the Biotech guy showed them the building, he showed a joke that one of the molecular life sciences people had written on the board and commented that the molecular life sciences people are really weird. He didn't know that was what she wanted to study. So basically, she's in the nerd major at the nerd college. But going to this school reduces the risk of not being able to find student housing....there are still issues, but fewer than at other schools. If she decides to get a room at some point, it shouldn't be as hard or take as long. But there are no dining hall options at universities here. You are on your own. Student housing is generally like a small apartment where you share a bathroom and kitchen with several people. There's no meal plan because there's no dining facility. And I don't know about proximity...I don't think it's necessarily on campus. Actually most universities here don't really have a "campus" as such....the buildings are spread throughout the city. E's actually does have a campus and there's a bus from the train station to the campus, so commuting is really easy and she doesn't really have to ride her bike very far. But some places will be miles from classrooms, so everyone has to bike everywhere.
Sounds like the "nerd school" is the place to be those people are going to do great things! Also reading this made me think if some Romance STEM books and I wondered if you or E have read any? The author I like is Ali Hazelwood, they can be a bit racy but it is nice to see a focus on women that are serious about their science careers looking for love.