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New Year, New ’Canes: Move-In Day Arrives at UM


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    Sydney Zarriello, a freshman neuroscience major from Severna Park, Maryland, gets help from her mom, Susan, while moving into Stanford Residential College on August 21.

    Sydney Zarriello, a freshman neuroscience major from Severna Park, Maryland, gets help from her mom, Susan, while moving into Stanford Residential College on August 21.

    With suitcases, clothing, and boxes scattered about the floor of his Stanford Residential College dorm room, Michael Trethewey wasn’t thinking about the first day of classes or the textbooks he’ll have to purchase as he embarks on his journey as a University of Miami student.

    “One of the first things I’ve got to learn is how to iron,” said Trethewey, 18, placing a stack of neatly folded T-shirts in a dresser drawer.

    He was among the more than 1,900 UM freshmen who moved into on-campus housing on August 21, as a new school year got under way. In all, about 4,400 students moved into the five residential colleges—800 of them upperclassmen who live in the University Village Student Apartments.

    At Stanford Residential College, Michael Trethewey unpacks some of his clothes. The 18-year-old freshman is rooming with longtime friend Patrick Westwater.

    At Stanford Residential College, Michael Trethewey unpacks some of his clothes. The 18-year-old freshman is rooming with high school friend Patrick Westwater.

    Trethewey’s concerns over ironing a proper crease in a pair of slacks is one example of the many worries, large and small, college freshmen often experience when living away from home for the first time in their lives. “Being more on their own, having mom and dad around a lot less, and sharing a bedroom and bath for the first time are some of the challenges they face,” said Jon Baldessari, UM’s associate director of housing and residence life. “They’ll also have to deal with being academically and intellectually challenged and making decisions on their own.”

    Anxiety over meeting and getting along with a roommate is one challenge many UM freshmen won’t experience. More than half of the incoming class used a UM online search program to select roommates, with the rest “either identifying a roommate preference on their application or electing to have our assignment staff place them,” explained Baldessari.

    For Trethewey, it was easy. He and Patrick Westwater, who have been close friends since high school, requested to be roommates on their freshman applications. “We texted each other a lot over the summer to work out the details of who would bring what,” said Westwater, 19. “I brought most of the electronics, and Mike, well, he brought the ironing board.”

    As Sydney Zarriello, a freshman neuroscience major from Severna Park, Maryland, settled into her new digs on Wednesday, she admitted that she was she a bit “nervous” but “also excited” about starting college. “I’m sure I’ll be calling home a lot, even if it’s to talk for just a little while,” she said.

    “Make smart decisions, Sydney,” her mother, Susan, told her.

    Helping UM’s newest ’Canes adjust to campus life are resident faculty members who support and promote student well-being, safety, academic achievement, learning, and development. One of them, Daniel Wang, a senior lecturer in biology, stood Wednesday in the lobby of Stanford Residential College, welcoming students and parents as they checked in, many of them pushing carts loaded down with suitcases, flat-screen TVs and computers. Wang, an associate master at Stanford, explained that one of the ways he helps new students adjust to living on a university campus is by taking them on tours of the Everglades to explain his research in the conservation of natural resources.

    An online program aimed at improving student retention is also at the disposal of UM’s first-year students. MAP-Works, now in its third year, uses student reporting to identify obstacles to student success, allowing mentors, faculty, and staff to render the appropriate aid.

    Classes on the UM campus begin today.

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