Thanks! Yup, I have accommodation (it's pretty much guaranteed for grad students and actually requisite for matriculating - but you can ask for an exception, if you really don't wish to live in residence).
If you're curious, this is how my application process went:
- contacted supervisor over the summer (around July I think)
- sent documents in late September
- accepted in late October/early November
- received confirmation after sending in my final transcript (in June, since that's when we convocate at U of T)
Accommodation really slow in coming... In fact, I got the information via email from my college grad tutor's office (Fitzwilliam) because the Board of Graduate Studies was so slow. I received a package about 2 weeks later, but it's nothing fancy like US law schools/colleges will send you! Don't expect anything to knock your socks off
One more thing about colleges - I was stupid - put Fitz down without really looking into anything else. I went to a rather hoity-toity college at Toronto and just didn't care about formal high table dinners etc. Also, I'm living in a relatively *new* building by British standards, which means a lot when you want good running water, nice kitchen facilities, and heat during the winter. This is just a thought, since many of my friends went the same route after we discovered in college that old limestone and lead windowpanes may look romantic, but certainly don't feel romantic in the middle of December when you have ice inside your window and your room doesn't heat up.
Trinity has very poor grad housing; my friend at St John's is really happy, and my other friend at Murray Edwards (all women's) is probably the most delighted of us all. She lives in a modern flat build ~2 years ago and ME has beautiful gardens where you can pick fruit & vegetables to your heart's content!
I had another friend go to King's and have a good experience there, and my supervisor is at Gonville & Caius so if I stay for the PhD we've already talked about me switching over so that I'm closer to him for convenience. And, of course, another good measure is whether the college is known for being particularly strong in your field of study.
Hope this helps! I'll be posting over the year if you have any more questions once I'm actually in the middle of school.