1. The school allocates it by itself.
In some colleges and universities, dormitories are allocated according to students' majors. After students are admitted to the school, the school will assign students with the same major to a dormitory. Of course there are exceptions. Maybe none of your roommates are a professional.
Just like a classmate in the same major when he first entered the university, because the dormitory in the senior school has six rooms and there are 4 1 students in the senior school, there is one more student in the dormitory at last, and then the school combines several redundant students. This situation is very common. Because the school allocates its own dormitories, students have almost no right to change their dormitories.
2. Students' choices when they enter school.
There are also some schools that allocate dormitories on the day students enter school. Of course, this distribution is also to assign male and female students of the same major together, but students can choose to live in a dormitory with their classmates who want to sleep, which is more humane. Although I just entered the university and don't know much about it, it's better to find a roommate who is pleasing to the eye than one who is not pleasing to the eye.
This selection method requires students to make a choice on the day of registration. After entering the university report, students will come to their dormitory. The dormitory uncle or the senior sister who brought you to the dormitory will tell you which dormitories are your professional dormitories, and then let you choose and get the dormitory key.
Although this method of choosing dormitory is more in line with students' wishes, it may be more troublesome for the overall planning of the school.