Abstract
Campus house is commonly conceived and carried out as a merely physical shelter to snugly accommodate students in shared
campus environment. In order to recruit and retain students in the universities, there is a need to enhance student satisfaction
towards the provided housing facilities. The purpose of this paper is to investigate the significant difference in satisfaction means
reported by the students from various socio-physical backgrounds. Particularly, it examines the statistically significant
differences from the aspects of gender, mix-ethnicity, economic status, and previous home experience. Data were obtained from
the face-to-face survey, administered to 495 participants who stayed on-campus at Malaysian Research Universities. These were
analyzed using descriptive, T-test, and One-way ANOVA. Generally, the results show that significant differences can be seen in
a different way from every aspect and obviously reveals that students were adapted to live in shared campus environment.
Consequently, it is hoped that the findings of this study should therefore be valuable and considered by the universities
management in an attempt to improve the quality of their future campus house.