Right. One in which they'd be ADULTS. |
This says that you only care about your money, not about your son. If that is the case, then don't pay. Send him to the school where he will make the same mistakes, but you don't suffer the financial consequences. |
| My freshman gave us access. We still mostly so that we can pay the tuition bill, but technically I could look at semester grades. I probably won’t have to; my kid is pretty open about assignment grades (which don’t appear in the portal anyway) and if the grades drop below a 3.3 GPA we’ll find out regardless when DC ends up on academic probation. |
+1. In addition, you clearly want to provide oversight and said you’ll have a better idea of how things are going if he’s right down the road. Make him stay local. You’ll feel better if you can intervene quickly. |
| Yeah all that FERPA was a pain in the neck when my kid had unexpected paranoid schizophrenia Freshman year. What a terrible way to manage mental health at college. |
| I do not check my college or high school students' grades. Both let me know how they are doing and are responsible for their own learning. My college student is independent and should he do poorly or lose his scholarship or fail out, he will need to bear the consequences of those choices. |
Weird you have 4 kids that don’t talk to you? |
It’s weird that you think adults don’t need to talk ever again, or share, or reach out for support. We’re you abused as a child and have issues with bonding? |
Yes. It’s hard. That is why it’s best to just have them sign documents as a rule. Mental illness between 18-25 is way too common. My friend is dealing with a son who was put on an emergency hold by his RA last week (though he went willingly). |
I wouldn’t ignore my other investments and I don’t plan on ignoring this one. I expect to be able too see end of semester grades. |
| I would love to have access, and initially my son gave it to me in freshman year. However, maintaining access is difficult with the system constantly requiring a confirmation from a push notification from the student's phone. After a while, I just stopped. He sends me a screenshot of his grades every semester and it's fine. |
| One did, one didn’t. We are paying full freight for both, but once we started getting “congratulations on you child making Dean’s list” for the one that didn’t we’ve been fine with it. |
|
My kid is a college senior.
I may have thought of this before she started school, but honestly it has been a non issue. I would not even know how to look (if she did grant me permission, which I can't remember). She tells me her grades, and has done well. I guess I am lucky. It is FAR more important that your kid grants you access to their MEDICAL information. If they have a mental health crisis or are found unconscious somewhere, you want to be able to talk to the doctors caring for him/her. |
| Have your kids sign a FERPA waiver. We did with both. One was SN and needed us to advocate for her. The other didn’t need it but we had an incident in the family where a cousin was kicked out of a very expensive private for which her mother was paying and her mother would have never known had not a letter come to their residence informing the student that she could not return until she had gone to community college and take certain courses and get a certain grade. The parents were livid that the school had never informed them. So we had our children file the waivers. |
That is weird. Much weirder than a parent that wants to see all the grades. |