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Also, consider pivoting to teaching. Some local public schools will hire without a teaching certificate and reimburse the night classes needed to get that certificate. Salary would notch up once the teaching certificate is obtained.
Private schools, either secular or religious, might be a better starting place for a teaching career. There are legal requirements for teachers in public schools to have teaching certificates, but private schools are exempt legally from that. Most privates don't care about that piece of paper. |
| Our new college grad is staying in their college town and working a (menial to DCUM) service job they've been doing while a college student only with more hours since they have more free time now. Making upwards of $20/hour with benefits, paying their own rent, one roommate, found new off campus apartment $200 cheaper per month than what they had (kid is a hawk with their own dollar) while they gear up to apply to graduate school. We did offer to house our new college grad for the interim, you're always welcome to come home, but our kid likes their adult independence and working a steady job for their own paycheck. I'm 21, I need to make my own way now, moving home would feel like I'm backsliding. Love ya, but thanks no thanks, and I so respect that as their parent. I did the same at their age, even though it wasn't always easy. We still help with car insurance and medical, emergencies. Otherwise, they're paying for their own utilities, food, gas, extras. What's your kid's plan for the next 24 months? Grad school or workforce? |
I'm pp and this was my point... This Summer’s Teen Job Market Is the Toughest in Decades https://apple.news/AVfat7jgLSGCK-pK5KQkyog |
+graham’s # here…GenEx daughter of Silents & if you asked them, they were the greatest parents who ever existed |
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He needs,to start making a transition to self support. I would encourage him to take any sort of temporary work or even a retail job that gets him out earning money. If you let him sit around at the house without doing any work you are sending a message that you are going to support him.
It is hard to transition out of college but starting with any job will help him build skills for a professional environment and maybe make a good connection for FT job. Does his uni have a career center that he can visit? |
It is not a poverty mindset if you are constantly searching for opportunities. I had a retail job after college to supplement my journalism earnings that were quite paltry. The retail job earned me a couple hundred extra a week and helped me get more professional clothes and very importantly kept me out there and motivated. It was the energy that was a key to wanting to improve my situation and kept me out and active. I eventually got a better journalism job before becoming a paralegal and then going to law school. But feeling like I was out in the game was huge. The last thing you want is an unemployed person sitting at home surfing the net for jobs and then spacing out all day. I have seen several friends do that and it leads to inertia and in some cases depression. |
These sound like good ideas. Although I would not specify bedtimes or wake up times, he's a big boy and needs to figure all that out. The dinner idea one day a week is good though. It will be easier for him to find another job if he is working *any* job he can find to tide him over. After he finds any job, slowly start introducing expenses he needs to pay (phone bill share, internet share, etc...) Goal.is to soft.launch him as an adult. |