What school and is he happy? |
Isn't Rollins rigorous? |
| Personally, id worry about an adhd kid getting lost or off track at a large school. With a big campus, think of the time needed to walk (or shuttle) to class, to library, dining hall, gym, etc. A lot less hand holding and advising at big schools unless you initiate. With those strong grades and a desire for mild weather, maybe look at wake forest, urichmond, and other mid size schools... |
For my kid with high stats but little desire to grind it out academics-wise we specifically discouraged wake forest bc of its reputation for being a lot of work compared to comparably ranked schools. (The whole “Work Forest” thing.) |
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OP, I think you are focused on the wrong things. DD sounds like a great student, and most kids don't know what they want to study at this age and have not found her passion. I would not worry about that part at all.
What you want to focus on is a school where she isn't overwhelmed far from home because of the ADHD. How much do you have to support her now to get those (amazing) grades and scores? If it's a lot, then you need to find a school that will offer her supports. If she's doing it on her own, just let her pick anywhere she likes and CALM DOWN because she is truly fine. |
Elon or Furman |
💯 |
I agree to consider supports and how much scaffolding a kid needs but I do think op is smart to keep this in mind. Some kids are smart enough/good enough test takers to pull off impressive high school stats but are just temperamentally unsuited to intense schools (and unlikely to thrive with lots of very intense peers.) |
Look into colleges with good support services for disabilities. Also smaller colleges may be better for her, less likely to get lost and easier to get to know profs who will be providing accommodations. |
Yes we are looking mainly at smaller schools for my smart kid with ADHD who wants serious academics but also doesn't want a super intense place either. But he doesn't want Southern or rah rah. |
| My daughter was similar. She thrived at Auburn, where she discovered her major. It is niche, and Auburn excels in this area. The school ticked all of her social boxes, although she tends left. The school was not as conservative as anticipated, which was a relief. Alumni are very active, and she is now very well employed and lives in a major US city up north. Good luck! |
Oh FFS. Are you one of those grifters who writes grind culture fanfic posts on LinkedIn? |
What’s the issue with the post above?? |
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I am surprised at some of the hostility. I assume there were a lot of kids like this out there (or maybe I am just hoping mine is not an outlier). Mine has never been diagnosed with ADHD but we do wonder as he is always missing assignments or not turning in things. Despite this, he is taking a rigorous courseload and mostly good grades. He has a 1540 SAT. But he would not do well at a super intense school because he is not motivated to go above and beyond.
From what I hear - this is not uncommon for kids with great grades and test scores. There are some that are very motivated and ambitious but (especially among boys) - I thought those were the outliers. Maybe not on this board... |
Alabama and yes happy, other than lack of good Asian food (Thai, Vietnamese). He is the Blount Scholars LLC within the Honors College and is doing great. One freshman class is just busy work but his other classes are great. He’s planning to do a summer session in Norway! |