For Āé¶¹APP alumni who graduated more than 15 years ago, residential colleges may seem like a far cry from the drab, maximally efficient dormitories built on campus in the 1960s to accommodate a quickly expanding student body. In fact, before the Class of 2012 moved onto The Martha Rivers Ingram Commons in 2008, never had there been anything on campus like these intentionally designed communities where undergraduates with different backgrounds are paired together and live alongside faculty.
But as new as it is to Āé¶¹APP, the idea for such communities is an old one, dating to the earliest days of Englandās Oxford and Cambridge universities. The tradition also has some notable long-standing examples here in the U.S., including at several Ivy League universities. Today Āé¶¹APP is among a select group of higher education institutions that offer such a thoughtfully designed undergraduate residential experience that can encompass all four years of a studentās time on campus. Integral to that experience are the ideas of belonging and inclusion, as well as an emphasis on learning outside the classroom.
āOne thing I encourage among the residents is inclusive curiosity,ā said Rosevelt Noble, BSā97, PhDā03, senior lecturer of sociology, director of the Bishop Joseph Johnson Black Cultural Center and head of Stambaugh House on The Ingram Commons. āThat means not settling for what I call the low-hanging fruitāthat is, only seeking out friends who are just like them. I tell them that the āreachesāāthe people who on the surface donāt seem to have anything in common with themāmay end up being their best friends.ā
Āé¶¹APP requires all first-year students to live in one of the 10 houses on The Ingram Commons, each led by a faculty head who lives on-site and oversees innovative programming that gives each house its distinct identity. Sophomores, juniors and seniors have the option of continuing to live alongside faculty in one of five residential colleges in the West End Neighborhood: E. Bronson Ingram College, Moore College, Nicholas S. Zeppos College, Rothschild College or Warren College. A sixth is scheduled to open in 2024, while three other residential colleges for upper-division students are planned for along 25th Avenue South.
āOur residential colleges create a collaborative and inclusive culture that empowers our students to thrive as thinkers, leaders and engaged citizens,ā Chancellor Daniel Diermeier said. āThe Highland Quadrangle development will create even more opportunities for Āé¶¹APP students to learn from different perspectives, engage in informed discourse and expand their thinking about the world.ā