Actually it says nothing about my background. It says I support my child’s interests. Mine choose to do it. It’s not my interest at all. You clearly push only your interests. I don’t need my kids to work and earn money during the school year. Why would you do that to them. I highly doubt what you are saying is true but ok. Again, too clubs mean nothing. Most do very little and it’s name only. My kid is not going to the same schools as yours. Mine doesn’t care about status and we’d rather pay for college and grad school at a school we can afford. You don’t need a degree from a so called ivy to do well in tech. And mine want a dual major so not all schools have both. And, no, there is no time. There are often several activities a day and some things are missed or we have a delicate balancing act of leaving one to go to another and returning. |
NP. Wow, are you pathetic. |
Ah, and you’re a racist to boot? Honey, shhh. Your inferiority complex is showing. |
| Maybe the whiskey finally knocked her out. Ding dong the witch is dead. |
My kid loves the stuff they do…that’s why they are able to handle it while yours can’t. Don’t give me that BS that your kid wanted to be in the orchestra…you foisted that on them starting at a young age. Sorry…your BS just isn’t holding up. |
You have a kid that also is incapable of attending a midweek event? |
Take all the potshots you want…but all the holier than thou “my kids don’t have time to socialize at all midweek” is complete BS. |
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I don’t know if some of you aren’t aware, but social skills and networking skills are often half of what makes people successful. Not letting your kid practice that and develop those seems like a huge mistake. A lot of perfectionist academic kids burn out.
Also if your kid is only successful bc their parents force them to stay home and do work, that’s not usually sustainable once they go off to college. The other probable reality is that most of the kids here whose parents say they are “too busy” might not be getting any invites. And finally - this kind of strict “family only” policy is actually really common in 1st generation immigrant families. |
Uh oh….watch out for the racist police. |
DP…why do you keep saying school clubs do very little? Robotics, debate, the school newspaper at many schools and numerous other clubs are very involved and compete in tournaments and competitions. Stop making sweeping nonsense statements. |
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No rule against weekday socializing in our house, but it rarely happens for 15 year old daughter - she has dance 3 nights a week, and usually uses the other night to catch up on homework etc. She also goes to a magnet school so afterschool hangouts aren't super convenient. She sometimes will go to a school related event on a weekday if she can fit it in (school play or sports game for example).
She loves dancing and is friends with her teammates, so I don't think she sees it as a sacrifice. She does socialize on weekends around her dance schedule. My son is 13 and his sports schedule usually keeps him busy 1-2 weeknights a week - and we live next door to his best friend. They hang out almost every day that they are both free - usually right after school. I'm very happy with this, they usually do something active (road hockey, shooting hoops etc). He still has time to do homework - we will see what happens when they start high school next year. |
I have gone to midweek basketball games where STA and Sidwell play and there are lots of students. Not sure why there is this weird misperception. We aren’t talking midweek parties here. I also don’t get why parents are fine with their kids missing out on pretty normal HS experiences. |
Really? Weren’t you saying something about how your kid would sneak out at night in the middle of the week? He sounds like a juvenile delinquent quite frankly. |
+1 but now we know OP is a complete and utter troll. |
They do, just only on weekends you twat. |