Why? He chose the class, right? He should accept that he made the decision that he thought best at the time and move on from there. If you had pushed him to take that class, he did, and then did poorly, he'd now be blaming you for pushing him. |
I feel the exact same way with similar results. But deferred at Wisconsin and Michigan. Waiting on others and in some. |
He was just a little kid who didn't know better, and I am an adult who should have known better. |
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My kid is extremely stressed by the whole process. Maintaining high grades, rigorous classes, athletics, finding meaningful extracurriculars, high pressure among peers.
It’s a lot of stress. I have no personal stress over it, but I AM involved, supportive and try to help where I can. |
Some people are more easy going (your son) and some worry more. Your advice is not helpful, so why offer it. |
OP clearly just wants to feel guilty and stressed and nothing we say is going to make a difference. |
I take on all the stress, and I don't know how not to, or not to feel hugely responsible.I feel like where they end up with good guidance v. low guidance/bad guidance will be different, and I am the one making the difference. It feels like too much on my shoulders to decide. |
I get your point but how is what I am saying wrong? We're asking little kids to make decisions that change what college they can get into. |
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I didnt feel stressed until the day my kids ED decisions were being announced. Not sure they did either.
I didn't plan their path, neither did they. They took the hardest classes they could, did as well as they could, did sports and ECs they enjoyed and in the end it all worked out. I did stress a tiny bit about how I was gonna pay for it, but they are in state schools and its really not THAT bad. I am cash flowing about half because I didn't save enough. |
If it's causing this much stress then you should find a good college counselor to provide the guidance or invest your time in doing the research to really understand the process so you feel more confident guiding them. I do get the stress. I felt that way as my oldest started high school but I am a librarian and I deal with stress by doing research! Read everything I could, listen to a lot of podcasts and by the time he was ready to start the process I felt really comfortable with it. And, fully understood that some schools are super hard to get into but there are many options that can provide a great start to life so was really chill about which place they ended up. |
HS students aren't "little kids". How do you plan to make all of their decisions once they get to college? |
9th grade is a little kid |
If you really think your son’s college experience and future career hinges on one class, then honestly there’s no hope for you. Every year, every semester, every test and class is going to have you second guessing yourself. And feeling guilty. And wanting to step in and “fix” things. Strap yourself in. It’s gonna be a bumpy ride. |
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There is nothing I can say that will make it better for you. BUT, good or bad, kids will find admission in all kinds of big/small, rural/urban etc etc colleges or even go to community college and then regular college. The college admission does not matter eventually. What matters? My top 7 - 1 - Choosing a major and career that will make you employable as soon as you graduate in your field 2 - Excelling at college academically, keeping your nose clean at school/work/private life, not getting derailed. Protect your health, academic record, mental peace, reputation, money and physical security. 3 - Having the least amount of student debt possible. Zero student debt is even better. 4 - Making sure that your basic needs are covered at college without having to hustle for it - roof over head, place to study, medical care, food and transportation, academic tools, tutors, daily needs. 5 - Having a support system that may include being close to home. Homecooked meals, someone to do your laundry once in a while when you are sick. Take all the help you can get. 6 - Mom and dad not divorcing or selling the house and moving away or dying. So, nothing catastrophic. Parents who throw their kids out at 18 are especially toxic for college kids. 7. Internships, research opportunity, part time jobs - experiences that build your resume. Someone to teach you interview skills, networking, job hunting, how to dress for work and basic financial literacy. |