You should stay as many nights as you want and go to any even you want!
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You’re not following. I’m a UVA parent. |
not at all true for Boston and Philadelphia which combined have probably 200 colleges in their metropolitan areas. |
It’s already hot out lol. Besides. I’m just trying to do the kids a favor. |
Exactly |
You do realize how much you just contradicted yourself, right? You say the schools are “not like that“ then you go right into how much money you are paying for tuition and that is why you expect that. Well, the reason they are doing those panels and such is because they have to deal with parents like you with your attitude. If you don’t see that, there’s no curing you |
Option number one: post on DCUM Option number two: hang around my kids college an extra day and attend panel discussions and other parent orientation events with other crazy parents Isn’t the choice obvious? At least tell me you don’t raise your hand at these events while other parents roll their eyes. Please tell me that. |
I totally agree. To everyone saying visit the next morning, you are prolonging the goodbye and forcing everyone to go through it twice. Drop off and go. Let them figure it out with their surroundings and get to know people. Yikes. |
Because we already mocked her on name dropping, not she is money dropping. |
I’m fascinated that somehow you have been able to attend the family orientations of every college in order to draw that conclusion. Please tell us how you managed that, particularly with all those kids! The other parents we met weren’t anxious or hovering. They were excited, happy to share useful, less official info that the college won’t tell you and getting to look around the place where their kids will spend four years. In our case we also met up with old friends whose kid ended up at the same school. All in all, it was a lovely day and a nice transition time. Why you’re so triggered by that idea is beyond me. |
I’m not like other moms. I’m a cool mom. But not cool enough to avoid wasting time mocking people on the internet. |
Because you are so willfully blind, it’s laughable |
Nope. I'm saying, I'm paying a lot of money. They're offering a lot of programming. I'm going to take advantage. My kid was the one who requested getting in the night before and not leaving at 6am to get to move in time on time. So one night is on them. One is on me. We're all good with it! Be blessed! |
I'm paying 90k and dont have a kid at yale. This is what COA is now. |
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Look, the bottom line is that colleges have had to adjust over the years for helicopter parents and have had to come up with ways to remove them from their children as early and as much as they can from the move in process without alienating and enraging them. That's what the parent "panels" are all about. You can be assured that the schools are rolling their collective eyes at all of it.
It's not just an American problem, btw. I once helped one of my kids find an apartment in the UK for grad school, and in the process found myself on campus about to enter a building where a "no parents allowed" orientation was going on. The kid at the door gently refused my entrance. After I assured him that it was an innocent mistake and I was not hovering we had a good laugh about the helicopter parent problem. |