Showing posts with label dorm. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dorm. Show all posts

Monday, April 30, 2012

Dartmouth Expands Sex-blind Dorm Room Assignments

In its policy to allow anybody room with anybody, Dartmouth College is supporting the Gay Agenda proposition that there are not two genders, but rather a spectrum of gender where no one is male or female.

But for some, reality hits home:

“It would theoretically be a good idea [but] . . . We all use the same bathrooms, and you can’t really have boys and girls using the same bathroom in a way that makes everyone feel comfortable.”
-- Anoush Arakelian, student housing intern
For background, read Rutgers Co-ed Dorms & Showers: Gay Agenda and also read Co-ed Locker Rooms at Iowa College - Anything Goes

UPDATE 5/3/12: Princeton, UPenn, Chicago Now Offer ‘Gender-Neutral Housing' for Undergrads

-- From "College to expand gender-neutral housing options in fall" by Amelia Acosta, The Dartmouth Staff 4/26/12

As Dartmouth students gear up for room draw, they will have additional options for gender-neutral housing . . .

The Housing Office has seen “a lot of interest” in more options for male and female cohabitation on campus, [student housing intern, Maia] Matsushita said.

To read the entire article above, CLICK HERE.

From "Dartmouth: Dorm Assignments Will Not be 'Limited by Traditional Gender Binary'" by Susan Jones, CNSNews.com 4/30/12

People who wish to join the gender-neutral affinity program must fill out a special application, which asks, among other things, if a student is male, female, or intersex. It also poses the question, "Do you have a third-person pronoun you prefer to be addressed by? If so, which one?"

For the class of 2014, Dartmouth says it received 18,778 applications, and of that number, 1,139 students were enrolled.

Undergraduate tuition, room, board and mandatory fees run around $55,365 a year.

To read the entire article above, CLICK HERE.

Also read More Than Two Genders, Kindergartners Taught

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Co-ed Locker Rooms at Iowa College - Anything Goes

Like so many institutions of "higher learning," Grinnell College has taken the sexualization craze and "gender neutral" to the next extreme by encouraging boys and girls to shower together.

For background and lists of such colleges, read Rutgers Co-ed Dorms & Showers: Gay Agenda and also read Sexually Confused Legislation Killed in Maryland

-- From "College adds locker rooms to gender-neutral policy" by Mike Kilen and Adam Belz, USA TODAY 11/10/11

In what the National Student Genderblind Campaign calls a "rapidly growing collegiate movement," at least 54 colleges and universities across the country, many of them private, provide gender-neutral housing options this year.

[James Baumann, spokesman for the Association of College and University Housing Officers — International said] "It's usually a campus responding to a need. If the student body either overtly expresses a desire for this, or if the housing staff perceives a need for it, that's when they pursue this as an option."

At Grinnell, the gender-neutral idea was driven by transgender students, those who don't identify themselves as either male or female, and students transitioning from one gender to the other, students and school officials said.

To read the entire article above, CLICK HERE.

From "Iowa College Allows Students to Share 'Gender-Neutral' Locker Rooms" by Ray Downs, Christian Post Reporter 11/9/11

"This is a comfortable option for those that have trouble deciding whether to go to the bathroom - with the skirt or the pants on the sign," said Andrea Conner, director of residence life and orientation.

In the residence halls, students vote on whether or not the bathrooms are gender neutral.

With the changes at Grinnell College, at least one transgender student has said the attitude towards gender has made life easier.

To read the entire article above, CLICK HERE.

Thursday, March 03, 2011

Rutgers Co-ed Dorms & Showers: Gay Agenda

In response to the widely-reported suicide of a homosexual student, New Jersey's Rutgers University has decided to have girls and boys sleep next to each other, and share the same showers.

Makes no sense, you say? Perhaps a more advanced degree would help (or maybe an ivory tower office)?

-- From "Rutgers to offer 'gender neutral' housing after student's suicide" by Marisa Kendall, USA TODAY 3/1/11

Rutgers instated the new gender-neutral housing after members of the university's lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and questioning (LGBTQ) community advocated the change, said The Daily Targum, the university paper.

Co-ed housing will be offered in three residents halls and will not be an option for freshmen. Only students who already know each other can live together in gender-neutral rooms. Two residents halls will also have new gender-neutral bathrooms (with new locks on the shower stalls).

Co-ed housing can ease an LGBTQ student's fear of not being accepted by his or her assigned roommate, Joan Carbone, executive director of Residence Life told The Daily Targum.

To read the entire article above, CLICK HERE.

From "Rutgers University Implements Co-Ed Dorms After Student's Suicide" by WPIX Newsroom 3/1/11

As part of a new gender-neutral program, Rutgers University will soon allow students to share a dorm with a roommate of the opposite sex.

Under the new program, gay, lesbian and transgender students will get the option of having either a male or female roommate. Heterosexual students will also be permitted to dorm with students of the opposite sex.

To read the entire article above, CLICK HERE.

From "Rutgers to introduce co-ed dorms" by CNN 3/1/11

The gender-neutral housing pilot program starts in the fall and is aimed at helping gay students feel more safe and comfortable. But it's not just for gay students.

"I think my parents would be fine with it," said [student] Alex Sullivan. "It's obvious it's supposed to be like you're living with a friend, not with like a girlfriend or something. So if you trust us to be adults, which you should because we're all adults, it makes sense to me."

The executive director for residence life says the school will not ask housing candidates if they are romantically involved.

To read the entire article above, CLICK HERE.

From "Rutgers Okays 'Gender-Neutral' Dorm Rooms to Help Gays Feel Safer" By Bonnie Rochman, Time Magazine 3/3/11

Now New Jersey's state university has become the latest to announce it will allow male and female students to share a dorm room, in an effort to make the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community of students feel right at home.

Two months ago, Joan Carbone, the university's executive director of residence life, met with student representatives of the college's LGBT community . . .

Rutgers is calling its new co-ed living arrangements “gender-neutral housing” because students can choose to live with whomever they want: two men, two women or a woman and a man. Freshmen will not be able to select a roommate, but they can indicate a preference for an open-minded person who is welcoming of different sexual orientations.

Parents unhappy with such an unorthodox dorm-room living situation are pretty much out of luck since housing contracts are signed by students. “We won't be talking to parents about this,” says Carbone.

To read the entire article above, CLICK HERE.

Click headlines below to read previous articles:

'Gender-neutral' Dorm Roommates Latest Trend


Girls Fear 51-year-old Dorm-mate 'Former Man'


Vermont Student Sues over Co-ed Showers & Toilets


Ohio Univ. Gender-neutral Dorm Living

Texas Christian University Provides Homosexual-designated Housing


Univ. of Chicago Provides Coed Dorm Rooms


Univ. of Pittsburgh Opens Girls' Dorm to Cross-dressing Men


Colleges Offering Coed Dorm Rooms

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Ohio Univ. Gender-neutral Dorm Living

Ohio University will begin facilitating students of any gender and/or sexual orientation to share dorm rooms, so as to better accommodate students who are not simply a boy or a girl.

"And it's the right thing to do, even if it upsets some people," said Kent Smith, vice president for student affairs.

-- From "Ohio Univ. to try letting men and women room together, plan said to help transgender students" by The Associated Press 1/13/11

It's an idea that was pushed on behalf of the school's Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender Center. Center Director Mickey Hart tells the student-run newspaper The Post the gender-neutral housing will be of particular benefit to students who identify as transgender.

Student Senate member Sean Martin says students in dating relationships who try to live together under the new housing option will be "frowned upon."

To read the entire article above, CLICK HERE.

From "Dorm barriers dropping at Ohio U." by Encarnacion Pyle, The Columbus Dispatch 1/13/11

Housing officials at the Athens campus had been independently studying the issue since the summer as a way to allow all students - gay, bisexual or straight - to pick their most-compatible roommates.

About 55 schools nationwide, including the Columbus College of Art & Design, Miami University and Oberlin College, allow some students of the opposite sex to share housing. Denison and Wright State University are studying the possibility.

Ohio University will discourage romantic partners from living together, but the school won't prohibit it.

To read the entire article above, CLICK HERE.

From "Ohio University to allow male-female roommates" by Lauren Bishop, Cincinnati.Com 1/13/11

But one parent of college-aged children, Lisa Schoenberger of Reading, said she wouldn't approve of such a living situation.

"All I can say as a parent is that if I'm paying for my child's education, they will abide by my rules and morals," she said. "I don't feel that it's moral to live with a member of the opposite sex before marriage. I know some will say that 'It's only platonic' but that doesn't cut it for me. Either agree to follow my rules when I'm footing the bill or pay for it yourself."

Jennifer Reed of Union Township, 28, said . . . "I think this experiment is a step in the right direction to accommodate and reflect the variety and scope of relationships found in the real world."

To read the entire article above, CLICK HERE.

Girls Fear 51-year-old Dorm-mate 'Former Man'

Students at Southwest Texas Junior College are uncomfortable, to say the least, after they learned they'd be living with a so-called transgendered person -- a 'woman' with the DNA of a man.



-- From "Transgendered Student Caught In Dormitory Dilemma" by Jessie Degollado, San Antonio KSAT 12 News Reporter 1/13/11

Jennifer Gellar's admission to Southwest Texas Junior College in her hometown of Uvalde is not a problem. But where she will live might be.

Willie Edwards, SWTJC spokesman, said which dormitory the transgendered student will be moving into when classes begin next Monday is "under review."

Gellar used to be John Brigman, who said he served in the U.S. Navy and in military police reserves. Now 51 years old, Gellar said "going over to the female side," resulted in a medical discharge from the military in 2008.

In her second year at the two-year college, Gellar said she would feel safer living in the women's dorm.

To read the entire article, CLICK HERE.

Sunday, December 05, 2010

'Gender-neutral' Dorm Roommates Latest Trend

The University of Arizona is considering a pilot program that would allow students of the opposite sex to live in the same dorm room, an option designed to make gay students feel more comfortable living on campus.

. . . universities are trying to take the ideological position that gender is arbitrary and socially meaningless.


-- From "University of Arizona considers co-ed dorm rooms" posted at KVOA TV4 Tucson AZ 11/23/10

The proposal right now would only make about five of the thousands of dorms here on campus "gender inclusive."

They are also looking into making a small wing of about twenty rooms exclusive to the gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender students.

Opponents of the idea are now speaking out. Religious defense group Alliance Defense says this will encourage sexual harrassment issues on campus.

To read the entire article above, CLICK HERE.

From "University of Arizona considering mixed-gender housing" by Anne Ryman, The Arizona Republic 11/22/10

Also known as gender-neutral, open housing or mixed-gender housing, the option is a growing trend on U.S. college campuses. It is offered to a varying degree at more than 50 colleges and universities, from elite private schools such as Dartmouth College to large public universities such as the University of California-Berkeley. Most of the policies have been enacted in the past five years.

Supporters say the option provides comfort and a feeling of security for groups that are vulnerable to harassment, such as students who are gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender or questioning their sexuality.

"That's completely at odds with common sense," said David French, senior counsel with the Alliance Defense Fund, a Scottsdale-based Christian organization that seeks to preserve family values.

Critics also say universities shouldn't be subsidizing "poor choices" by mixing different sexes in the same rooms. College students already struggle with plenty of issues, including binge drinking, depression and anxiety, French said.

To read the entire article above, CLICK HERE.

Wednesday, April 08, 2009

Texas Christian University Provides Homosexual-designated Housing

TCU is apparently the first campus in the state to reserve housing for gay students and straight students who support them.

UPDATE 4/13/09: Public uproar persuades TCU to reconsider

-- From "TCU to provide special housing for gay, lesbian students" by Holly K. Hacker, The Dallas Morning News 4/7/09

Like many colleges, TCU offers themed housing, called "learning communities," in addition to traditional dorms or apartments. For instance, there's the Green House, for students who care about the environment. The Language and International Living House, for those who want to master another language.

The idea is that students "are able to live with and near other students who have similar interests," TCU spokeswoman Lisa Albert said.

To read the entire article, CLICK HERE.

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Univ. of Pittsburgh Opens Girls' Dorm to Cross-dressing Men

Spokesman confirms new policy applies to housing; wardrobe or appearance "isn't what most people would expect of their sex."

"Why can't the institutions of higher education stay within their academic goals and not seek to be agents of political correctness?"

-- From "Pitt tweaking gender discrimination policy" The Associated Press 9/12/08

The University of Pittsburgh is broadening its anti-discrimination policy to include the way people express their gender identity through clothes and appearance.

The vice president of the university's Rainbow Alliance, which advocates for gay, bisexual and transgender students, says the changes extend that policy to "anyone whose gender identity does not match their assigned sex at birth."

God's fingerprints can't be removed: Genital surgery can't change DNA

From "University opens women's dorms to men" © 2008 WorldNetDaily 9/16/08

"Student safety should be utmost in the minds of the University of Pittsburgh and other schools," said Diane Gramley, president of [American Family Association of Pennsylvania]. "The addition of 'gender identity' to their policies is anti-safety. This policy change opens the door for sexual assault of female students and lawsuits from concerned parents and students."

. . . "Since this policy also affects housing, what is to prevent a male who says he believes he's 'really a female' from requesting and obtaining housing in the women's dormitory? This policy indicates that will be acceptable and, additionally, this 'man who thinks he is a woman' will be permitted to shower and use the restroom in the women's dormitory."

The school's website diversity page boasts, "Within the Department of Residence Life at the University of Pittsburgh, we acknowledge that human difference takes many forms in the world including factors such as: race, ethnicity, national origin, gender, gender identity, sexual orientation, socioeconomic status, religion, spiritual tradition, political affiliation, age, and ability. We recognize that the knowledge we gain from interacting with and learning from one another has both educational and personal value. This knowledge will move our students and staff toward acceptance of others."

To read the entire article, CLICK HERE.

Thursday, September 27, 2007

Dorm Brothel: The New Debauchery, and the Colleges that Let it Happen

I am prepared to ask whether America might not be lost because the great middle class was persuaded that they must send their children to college with no questions asked...

From "Dorm Brothel: The new debauchery, and the colleges that let it happen" by Vigen Guroian, posted at Orthodoxy Today

The Culpable College

The campaign against alcohol and drugs, which it seems every American college has proudly announced it is waging, is a smokescreen that covers the colleges' great sin. Regulating a substance like alcohol on an urban campus like Loyola's cannot succeed unless there is radical reform of the whole of college life. Nothing that the college does to limit alcohol consumption can make a significant difference until the major incentives to drink are removed, beginning with coed dormitories and apartments. Many of my students have explained to me that drinking, especially binge drinking, serves as the lubricant for the casual sex that living arrangements at Loyola invite and permit. There is no need to find the cheap hotel of yesterday. The college provides a much more expensive and available version of it.

The sexual adventures that follow can take a variety of paths, but what this young Loyola man describes is not atypical.

True story: I woke up at three in the morning one day last year to my roommate having sex in his bed five feet away from me. Taking a moment to actually wake up, I realized what was going on. I got up . . . heard what was going on, and . . . recognized the voice of the girl. . . . I had two classes with her the semester before and one that semester. . . . The next morning . . . there was no awkward exchange. No childish giggling. I simply told him that I could not believe that she didn't mind having sex with someone for the first time while someone else was in the room sleeping. I also couldn't believe that she hadn't stopped and covered herself up when I had walked out of the room. My roommate looked at me with a casual smile, the same smile I'd seen when talking about the Mets or Red Sox, the same smile I'd seen at our dining-room table over Taco Bell, and he said to me, "Whatever, she's a college girl."

This is a disturbing description of the demise of decency and civility between the sexes for which the American colleges are culpable and blameworthy. It is not that what this student describes was unheard of in the 1960s. Frankly, I can tell similar stories about my college experience. Nevertheless, this was the exception rather than a commonplace occurrence. For colleges made it clear to young men and women that such behavior was unacceptable, and had in place living arrangements with rules and sanctions that discouraged it.

There is nothing new or novel about human depravity or debauchery. Outrage over debauchery is deserved. Nevertheless, as I have suggested already, my outcry is not directed at the debauchery among college students, but rather at the colleges themselves. Today colleges not only turn a blind eye to this behavior, but also set up the conditions that foster and invite it. I am concerned about the young men and women who wish to behave differently, but for whom this is made especially difficult by the living conditions their colleges provide and often insist upon.

Read the entire article.