“Then we turn 18, and even though we’ve never had an original thought, we have to make the most important decision of our lives.” This is a quote from the Netflix Original Series of 13 Reasons Why, where the main character, Hannah, reflects on the stress of x-number of college decisions in the end of her sophomore year of high school. This is the epitome of all high school students and the strenuous decision on finding a place to spend the next four years. Factoring in some of the five W’s to help advance this decision could ultimately better a person’s analysis on the best college fit. One will consider where to attend based on the who (student body and professors), the what (majors and opportunities), the why (potential gain and learning), and the where (location). For the …show more content…
The duty of factoring in what the atmosphere and environment is around the campus can ease the fear of not having a safe or comfortable place to live out those four years. Carnegie Mellon offers underclassmen the chance to live on campus and upperclassmen tend to live off campus in fraternities or sororities. Actually, there is about 17% of students who participate in Greek life activities at Carnegie, and are known to have many fundraisers and social events that benefit the community around them. CMU endorses a 24/7 community of support, where they have blue boxes every building or so, which are there to help students at night to contact local police if they are in trouble. A trait that many schools should possess. CMU doesn’t have a big mess hall, but many different little cafes. Housing is available on-campus and around the Oakland community, which is the surrounding neighborhood. All on-campus residential areas are located in close proximity to academic buildings, which one would see as a huge plus. For Ithaca College, first-years usually stay on campus in a dorm room, while upperclassmen