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Programs & Events
Living & Learning Programs
Special Theme Housing
ORLL offers returning undergraduates a chance to live
with fellow students who share similar cultural or
academic interests in fifteen existing settings housed
in small wood frame houses around campus and several
apartments within Latin Way and Hillsides. Options
include the Africana House, Arts House, Asian American
Culture House, Chinese House, Crafts House, French
Language House, German Language House, Latino Culture
House, International Culture House, Japanese Language
House, Jewish Culture House, Muslim House, Rainbow
House, Russian / Slavic Culture House, and Spanish
Language House. Programs can include a wide range of
activities: participation in these unique on-campus
social and cultural communities and numerous
opportunities to organize and take part in campus-wide
educational, social, and community programming, peer
mentoring, and language practice.
Descriptions of these programs are available from each
house manager or in the Office of Residential Life and
Learning. To learn about the houses, you can visit them,
view their websites, call Residential Life and Learning
at (617) 627-3248, or contact the advisor or house manager(s). Each program has its own application and
selection process.
Bridge – Metcalf
The Bridge - Metcalf Program is designed to support
intentional opportunities for undergraduates to build a
bridge between academic and non-academic aspects of
their lives as students. A live-in faculty member and
members of the residential community contribute to
events, lectures, and discussions on a regular basis.
Specifically, the program exists to enhance intellectual
life and personal development in a residential
community, to increase out-of-class contact with a
diverse selection of engaging faculty, and to build a
vibrant intellectual residential community by expanding
the range of shared activities to regularly include
faculty and intellectual dialogue. There is a separate
application process each spring for returning students
interested in the Bridge - Metcalf option; first-year
students can select this option when completing their
housing questionnaire.
Carmichael Hall - Healthy Living
ORLL offers a healthy living residential option for
those desiring a residential experience facilitating the
practice of a lifestyle consistent with the wellness
ideal. This option is for those who wish to contribute
to a residential environment promoting physical and
mental health through self-care and personal
responsibility. While one aspect of this living
environment is a “no tolerance” policy for substance
use, all residents in healthy living communities are
expected to contribute to the development of a healthy
community through self-regulation, educational events,
and programs. Separate healthy living options exist for
first-year and returning students. There is a separate
housing selection based on an application process each
spring for returning students interested in the healthy
living option; first-year students can select this
option when completing their housing questionnaire.
First-Year Halls
Houston, Tilton, and Hill Halls present opportunities
for first-year students to live with members of their
class in a unique social setting, both uphill and
downhill. While all first-year students are required to
live in residential environments staffed with
undergraduate and professional residential staff who
provide social and developmental programming and strive
to build positive communities and relationships,
first-year halls also host a faculty member-in residence
and two resident head tutors. Programming and community
building around common class year-based experiences and
social opportunities is a focus for staff in first-year
halls. Please note that “First-Year Experience” events
are open to students not living in first year halls and
regularly publicized campus-wide.
Haskell Hall is a suite-style all first-year hall that
combines the aspects of all-first year living with
additional focus on active citizenship, one of the
hallmarks of a Tufts education. Jointly supported by the
Office of Residential Life and Learning and the Tisch
College of Citizenship and Public Service, first year
students in Haskell will have the added benefit of
support from upperclass student leaders promoting
involvement and awareness of active citizenship-related
events on campus. Interested students will have
opportunities to develop leadership skills to coordinate
projects of their own creation while having regular
opportunities to get to know students with similar
interests in active citizenship-related areas.
Wren Suites
The Wren Suites program is intended as an opportunity
for groups of sophomores to select a suite of rooms to
live together as a community (four double rooms and two
single rooms, grouped around a bathroom and
public-access common room). The undergraduate and
professional residential staff members provide social
and developmental programming appropriate to the
experience, interests, and needs of sophomore students.
Senior Corridor:
Sophia Gordon Hall &
Stratton Hall
Sophia Gordon (apartment-style) and Stratton Hall
(traditional hall) are available (based on lottery
selection) upper-class students with the goal of
facilitating class cohesion and positive social
opportunities for students with other members of their
class-year. All students live in single rooms.
Apartments contain private single bedrooms, a kitchen,
bathroom, and living room. Stratton Hall contains
private single bedrooms, a shared kitchen, shared
bathrooms, and shared lounge space. A professional
member of the residential staff is available, in-hall in
Sophia Gordon, to assist with student and facilities
concerns.
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