Many universities in the US offer on-campus housing opportunities to incoming as well as
already enrolled students. Recent research has theoretically as well as experimentally shown
that the most common student assignment mechanism used in the US is subject to serious
efficiency losses. In this paper we fi…rst show that a particular mechanism which is currently
in use at the MIT for about two decades is in fact equivalent to a natural adaptation of
the well-known Gale-Shapley mechanism of two-sided matching theory. Motivated from the
increasing popularity and success of the Gale-Shapley mechanism in a number of markets,
we next experimentally compare the performances of the MIT mechanism with that of the
leading theory mechanism Top Trading Cycles. Contrary to theory, the MIT mechanism
performs better in terms of efficiency and participation rates, while we observe no signi…ficant
difference between the two mechanisms in terms of truth-telling rates.