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Ra
Anyone here an RA or has been one? Advantages/disadvantages? Stories? I'm applying for it for next year, though I'm still unsure about it.
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One of my brothers was an RA but got fired for having sex with one of his residents.
So I guess a con would be: no sex w/ residents under risk of being fired. |
I was. Got to have a room to myself for the price of if I had a roommate plus a free parking pass as a few minor perks. Ummm...I never went home except for major breaks so didn't bug me one bit. You have to put up with a lot of crap sometimes. Don't be suprised if at 3 am you have a knock on your door from your residents needing something from you. Had one once need let in their room cause they left their key in their room and the roommate had locked them out not knowing they didnt have their key.
Other than that I would recommend it if you aren't one who likes going home all the time. |
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Here you get free room and board and a meal plan with 5 meals/week and $250 thrifty cash to use at the cafeteria or cabaret (food store).
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i'm currently an RA, and i think i liked the idealistic image of being an RA more than being one. dont get me wrong, i LOVE my job, and all 55 of my residents... but there are some days i dont wanna see freshmen. i love being on an RA staff, and i feel more connected to NYU by being an RA. call me dorky, but its true. and the influence you have on incoming freshmen and on university policy is cool too. never mind that the NYU compensation is pretty sweet (free room/board plus 15% off books, and get to move in 2 weeks early) thats approx. $16k. but there are schools where the comp. is way lower and not even worth it, unless you REALLY like the job. you can PM me if you want more specifics. |
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i was never an ra, but i was friends with some at my college when i was there. i know they got the highest meal plan, room and board, and a monthly paycheck (not much but moneys money!). not bad but it was also a smaller school and the room and board wasnt that expensive to begin with compared to other schools. i personally never would have done it because i lived in the dorms for a year and then moved off campus. i didnt really like the dorms. but if you like living in the dorms, then id totally do it!!
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In the area around NYU, free room and board might just be worth it. During my last year of grad school, I was a Graduate Assistant (basically a boss for the RAs). It was a pretty sweet deal too--free one-bedroom apartment (in Manhattan!), $5,500 stipend, meal plan, and dining dollars to use as I pleased. Add that to my partial TA-ship, and I graduated with a nice savings. :D Despite the crummy pay, I really liked being an RA. My undergrad required us to live on-campus for the first three years anyway, and the room I had as an RA was way better than any of the rooms my friends who lived in sophomore housing. Sometimes the kids were bratty. But...I could always close the door and pretend I was out of town. :) |
I was an RA for 3 years.
I loved it :) I got my single room, then apartment as an upperclassmen, for free. Plus, I learned a lot about planning and managing along with counseling and being a mentor. I met amazing people through Residential Life and I would do it all over again. I even met my very bestest friend as an RA - we were in the same building and became rediculously close. I would highly reccomend it... but you need to love bulletin boards and late night fire drills ;) :p |
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To live on campus pass the required time means loving late night fire drills :) The bulletin boards here are horrible...I could make a much better one with my eyes closed, so that's not a problem. I just feel as if the $6,600 somehow isn't worth it, as it doesn't even cover the cost of the room, I'm still going to be paying to live on campus...just not as much as I normally word. Also, it comes in the form of a JWU scholarship, and there is a limit to how much you are allowed per year of JWU scholarships (it changes every year). I have a feeling that I won't even be getting the full $6,600 because I have a lot in JWU scholarship money already. The money that covers room and board covers the weekday meal plan (3 swipes per day Monday - Thursday). It's an extra almsot $1,000 for the weekend meal plan (2 swipes a day, Friday - Sunday). RA's don't even get the weekendmeal plan for free, or anything else. It kinda stinks. |
I was never an RA but I do have some advice. If you become an RA and one of your residents has an injury or a medical problem, please take it seriously and not just tell him/her "it'll be fine, you don't need to go to the hospital".
One of my best friends had a really bad RA her freshman year. The first weekend, my friend got a UTI and was in horrific pain. The RA told her that health services wasn't open on the weekends and that she should just wait until Monday. Since this was my friend's first week at college, she trusted that the RA knew what she was talking about. Luckily, an upperclassman girl down the hall took my friend to a doctor. The doctor said that she should have gotten medical treatment as soon as she started to feel pain instead of waiting. Later in the semester, my friend tripped while running to answer her phone. She hit her head on the corner of her desk and had a gash on her forehead. The RA told her that she didn't need to go to the hospital to get stitches...that she just needed to bandage it up. So, my friend once again believed the RA. Luckily, some of the upperclassmen from down the hall went to see what was up. One of them was pre-med and insisted that my friend go to the hospital and took her to the hospital. She had to get stitches and the doctor said that if she hadn't gotten the wound stitched up right away, she would have had a really nasty scar. Moral of the stories: Your residents are going to look up to you and trust you. If you don't know the answer, it's better to be safe then sorry. You'd much rather have them go be told by a doctor that it's nothing than have it be something serious that didn't get medical attention. |
If you want to start RAing in the fall, how soon should you start contacting people? Speaking of contacting people, WHO do you contact?
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Look @ the Res. Life section on your schools website. My school had mandtory meetings that you had to attend to get the application and stuff. The applciatins are due in by Monday |
Honestly Caryn - the experience is worth it.
Plus, it looks really good to future employers. It shows responsibility and great management skills. |
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I can't believe people don't get the cost of their room and board comped for being an RA. I thought that was standard.
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they also got a single but they had to pay for it. another friend is an RA out at some school in CA, and they dont get jack. it is a volunteer position. then again, its a technical school and the RA doesnt have much responsibility over the residents. there, its more the security officer's position to handle what i would think was "RA stuff." |
i went to formal with an RA. she had her own apartment and stuff. she had mentioned that they were paid enough to cover the cost of apartment living, but not the extra bills.
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I thought this thread was about the Egyptian sun god. Seriously. I'm an idiot, obviously.
I was an RA - I was either the best RA ever, or worst, depending on who you ask. It does look good on a resume, and it will provide you EASY answers to pretty common application/interview questions (I'm talking softball shit like "what's the hardest thing you've done?" or "what are your weaknesses?"). The job kind of sucks, but can be rewarding. It's not nearly the time commitment they will tell you it is - you can dip out of much of it, plus most residents won't require much assistance. You will have a couple of clingers - you'll have to work out how to deal with them on your own. Past that, I still drank, went out, had other outside responsibilities, occasionally made out with girls, all that - it was certainly a worthwhile experience, plus the compensation was not even CLOSE to in line with the amount of work I did (I would estimate 10 hrs/week of actual work, but at BU RA positions paid full room and board - I obviously won in that exchange). |
I'm going to say at my school being an RA is a full time job. You get a set number of nights out (anytime you're out past 2am) a semester. It's not very many, and it's up to the individual RHDs. You have to put on programs, do bulletin boards, plan so many floor activities, work the front desk and also attend so many in-hall activities. The compensation is room and board (in a reduced capacity room) and the highest meal plan. In my opinion you have to love the job to keep doing it. Most RA's don't cotinue the job for the length of their time at college, it ranges from a year to two years usually. With quite a few leaving at semester of their first year.
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At IU, RAs get a single room (free room and board), a 2,704 point meal plan (it's the midrange plan), and a small monthly stipend. Here's the info page. (go to the RA/CUE online application center for specifics)
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I think it really depends on the school. Certain schools require a lot more responsibility than others, and certain schools obviously compensate you a lot more than others. For the record, all of my RA friends bitched endlessly about their jobs, but most of them did it for a second year, so take that as you will. |
Well, I handed in my application this morning. Thank you to all of those who have responded, it has gave me a lot to think about. I find out on Feb. 3 if I will be going to the first round of interviews. I will let you all know what happens :)
In terms of what rooms we get, it depends what dorm. If you are in a dorm that is normally all doubles, you get a single. If you are in a dorm that are triples, quads, or more, you get a double with the other RA from what I understand. The meal plans we have are the basic meal plan, then weekend. Basic is included with the price of the dorm, weekend is extra, so you get part of the basic meal plan covered with the $6,600. There is a limit to how much JWU scholarship money you can get however, so I might not even get the full amount. Either way, I look at it as less in loans for me to take out. You can't hold another on campus job, which means I will loose my work study. That kinda stinks, but seeing as how the pay isn't goood, this will actually force me not to be lazy and go ahead and get an off campus job instead of relying on work study. |
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Also, that limit on scholarship money sounds bunk. |
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I hate the limit also, and I think it's stupid, but hey...not my rules. |
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Update
I got both good and bad news.
The bad news: Because the longer you are in scool, the more you are able to take out in Stafford Loans, the less you are able to get in JWU Scholarship. I'm currently getting $10, 600, and my cap for next year is ~ $11,000, meaning I'm only going to be able to get $400 if I do get accepted, which I don't think is worth it because it means I loose my work study. The good news: I got accepted to go ahead and take step 2 to the RA process for next year. It's a day where we are broken into groups and there is a series of work shops, with RD's and RA's observing. I decided to go ahead and take the next step, and see what happens. If I do get offered a RA postion, I am going to talk to them and see what they can do for me, but if there is nothing they can do with the money situation, I am going to have to decline. |
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The one thing that I HATED about it was what we used to call "overnight duty". The RA's of the building had assigned nights that they had to be "on call" in case a resident was having problems or whatever. The only calls I EVER got were from drunk freshman girls at 3 in the morning who needed to be let into their rooms b/c they didn't want to carry their keys with them. |
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