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In this Issue:

  • Strategies on how new students should approach packing for college, and similar packing advice for students going abroad

I am out of the office today, so this is a pre-post

We are in early July, and our incoming ’29 Deacs are probably starting to think about making a packing list for college. Similarly, any Deacs going abroad this fall are likely starting to think about what they will need for their abroad semester.

Packing advice for new students

The best packing advice I can offer was given to me by my former French professor who took a group of us to Dijon, France for the fall semester of 1990:

Put the absolute bare minimum you think you need for the semester on your bed. Then pack half of that.

He was 100% right. Students – and I was as guilty of this as the next person – tend to overpack.

Encourage your Deacs – of all years! – to be really intentional about what they pack to bring to Wake. There is a finite amount of drawer/closet/underbed space in our residence halls. Things they like now (example: a favorite high school t-shirt) might not be something they ever wear once in college.

Also consider strategic packing: if you come for Family Weekend, you can bring some colder-weather clothes and take home summer things they no longer need/wear. You can also mail some of those clothes later in the fall. (Note that student PO box numbers typically are assigned closer to the start of August, so your ’29 can’t find their number just yet).

Packing for students going abroad

For those with students going abroad, the advice above still holds true: Put the absolute bare minimum you think you need for the semester on your bed. Then pack half of that.

There is a finite amount of space in luggage, and everyone has a different pain tolerance for how much luggage they are willing to carry through airports and host cities.

When I packed for France, I had a few warm weather outfits, a few cold weather outfits, an all-weather coat, and a lot of things I could layer if I needed to.

Because I had a limited supply of clothes that I had to wear over and over again, I was so sick of them at the end of the semester that I never wanted to see them again. I wish I had thought of donating all those clothes to the local Goodwill equivalent at the end of the semester, and just brought home souvenirs in my suitcase. That’s an approach to consider for Deacs going abroad.

My best travel find of late is the Foldie – a pretty large tote bag that folds up very small when empty. Before your trip, put the fully folded bag in your luggage, and voila! you have a bag to tote home with souvenirs.


Hope that is helpful as your Deacs think about packing.

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