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Sounds on point many of the frantic parents on some forums on this board
http://www.roxandroll.com/2014/11/parents-let-harvard-go.html |
| I share this sentiment completely and hope that my son's well rounded personality gives him an edge over all these robots in the making |
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I think the Harvard angst is just a proxy for generalized parental anxiety disorder that afflicts Gen X parents.
Our parents fucked us up with all that latch key/free range parenting stuff, so we're determined to not make the same mistakes. |
Disagree. Being a latchkey kid made kids more independent and responsible, mostly, not all. I think the obsession with Ivies is a reflection of people's obsession with materialism and status. |
| It is the rankings that are making everyone crazy. This is just another form of marketing that makes people feel their choices are not good enough. |
I second that. Interesting article, good laugh. |
It is that, and a general sense that the U.S. is turning into an economic caste system, kind of like Brazil. |
That's where my (admittedly fairly mild) anxiety comes from. I truly don't care about status or wealth, but I get a little antsy about the increasing inequality gap and what it might mean for her future options. |
It's a reflection of people's feeling that the pie is shrinking, and if your child doesn't have the right credentials, your child won't get a piece. |
But, it's society's perception of how much of that pie is enough issue. It's not enough these days, especially in this area, to live in a modest home, drive a modest car, don't take flying vacations and not own a table/smart phone/2 or 3 flat screens. It's the "keeping up with Joneses" mentality that makes people feel this way. |
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There is some of that. But, for the most part, parents who are obsessed with Ivies are about status/prestige, and making sure their kid will be financially secure. Don't get me wrong. I want my kids to be financially secure, too. But, I don't think going to an Ivy is the only way to secure it. You can go to a non Ivy school and still land a great job that pays well (or even go to a trade school and do well). You can also go to an Ivy, be up to your eyeballs in student loans, and not be able to afford a lifestyle in the 10/20 yrs that you thought you bought with that Ivy degree. Ultimately, it's how hard you work - whether in Es/MS/HS to get into the Ivy, or in a non-Ivy college and in your job, you can still find financial success. |
| DONE. |
Ultimately, it won't matter because at some point there will be a working people's revolution. |
It's more like the Asian model. Kids cramming for exams, only the top have a chances at getting into the schools. |