What was the answer?
If your data is less than (hmmm) megabytes, don't worry about memory consumption. 1 or 2 Gigabytes is typical in normal computers today.
How big are the items? 32 char? 64k of compressed multimedia? Something big?
How reasonable is it to organize one item using both techniques? If the data are really the same, then a 5 pointer structure is interesting- someone could find a node in one ordering and then browse related nodes in the other ordering.
Are the items unrelated, some chalk, some cheese? Are they multidimensional? personnel records? Audio file descriptions? Recipes?
In school, a good teacher is trying to give you experience with common techniques and disciplines. Just like art class, or composition. Pencil, pastels, 5 paragraph essay. So the teacher might want you to write two different classes & constructors. Use one struct for one part of the data, different one for other data. Or the same. Just because.
Outside of school, the data comes in a format and there are operations desired on it/with it. "Use cases" are stories about how data is used, what has to be kept, what algorithms are used.
The point of this might be bimodal searching, 2 pairs of orthogonal pointers. It might be Unions, where each item is asssociated with a list or a tree, but not both at the same time. It might be a flurry of lightwieght subsets, trees and lists, that are compared and contrasted...
When in doubt, "data structures + algorithms = programs". But it pays to know what point the teacher is trying to make, and whether you want to follow their lead. (Usually, in school, you do.)