Saint Mary's Vice President of Student Life, James Sciuto, makes a strong case for their new two-year residency rule. He says the academic benefits are clear: students earn better grades and are more likely to finish on time . He argues that living in community provides "access to study spaces and the library—so you can really focus on studying" and greater opportunities to "meet with faculty and take advantage of tutoring and mentoring resources" .
This makes sense intellectually. If you're on campus, it's easier to go to office hours, form study groups, and use the library. But is this true in practice? Does living in a dorm actually make you a better student, or is it more about personal motivation? I'm curious if students feel the academic support is genuinely enhanced by just being there.
This makes sense intellectually. If you're on campus, it's easier to go to office hours, form study groups, and use the library. But is this true in practice? Does living in a dorm actually make you a better student, or is it more about personal motivation? I'm curious if students feel the academic support is genuinely enhanced by just being there.