Toggle navigation
Toggle navigation
Home
DCUM Forums
Nanny Forums
Events
About DCUM
Advertising
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics
FAQs and Guidelines
Privacy Policy
Your current identity is: Anonymous
Login
Preview
Subject:
Forum Index
»
College and University Discussion
Reply to "8 student deaths so far this year at NC State"
Subject:
Emoticons
More smilies
Text Color:
Default
Dark Red
Red
Orange
Brown
Yellow
Green
Olive
Cyan
Blue
Dark Blue
Violet
White
Black
Font:
Very Small
Small
Normal
Big
Giant
Close Marks
[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Parents allow electronics, teachers, daycare workers, Nannie’s, and coaches to raise their children, then expect them to be able to handle the stress and changes that come with college. They give them cell phones at 8 or 10 and that device quickly shuts out the parenting capabilities even more. They send them to schools that don’t even use textbooks and expect them to handle college life with note taking, writing, studying and reading from actual books and professional publications is often a requirement. They coddle them and cater to their every whim, claiming little Suzy doesn’t have time for learning how to cook, clean, do chores, plan a menu, learn finances because she has sooooo many activities. They don’t prepare them for the real world, too much coddling and not enough actual parenting. Then they get out on their own and lack basic skills and now college seems so much more difficult because someone missed how to adult 101 during the first 18 years of life.[/quote] I see this from the opposite side. With school standards that are developmentally unreasonable for many kids beginning at a young age and schools focused on "college and career readiness," the role of grades and testing looms large over kids. Their adult monitored activities consume their lives, leaving little time for free play. There's little time, inside and out of school, for free play - barely any recess. Teachers have increasingly been held to impossible standards and not given sufficient autonomy, which causes them to push back on students and their parents when adequate progress isn't being made. We also shifted to an ideal of intensive parenting, where parents are expected to cultivate their kids' lives, monitoring and supervising every minute. You can't blame parents for doing exactly what society tells them to do. Look at this forum and the contradictory messages. DCUM: You need to stop coddling your children and let them fail. Also DCUM: If your children fail, it is evidence that you are a terrible parent. Also DCUM: I'm a hiring manager, and I only hire students from top schools students with GPAs above 3.0. We didn't coddle kids too much; we collectively deprived them of the unstructured experience of childhood where they could socialize without adult interference, make low-stakes mistakes, and learn how to problem-solve on their own. With college and career readiness school standards, we pushed adult ideas on them when they weren't ready, while we (both parents, teachers, coaches, etc.) modeled a stressed-out adult existence that no one would voluntarily choose. Many kids haven't had the experience to figure out who they are, which is exacerbated by the pandemic. They have been taught to focus too much on achieving goals, often by winning the approval of adults, and not enough on developing human connections. Social media exacerbates this problem. Resilience isn't developed through failure and adversity alone. Resilient kids need support to try and fail and the strength to get up and try again. In this fractured world, many of them are terrified of making even a minor mistake because we taught them that their entire future depends on adhering to a particular path that doesn't include missteps or failure of any kind. Fear and anxiety are controlling their lives, which is why they have trouble forming the relationships that would help them become more resilient. [/quote] My personal favorite: I didn't marry for money, DH/DW was struggling when I met them [b]but[/b] on the path the make hundreds of thousands. The message is pretty clear that if you want to be desired you better be on that path. Look through any of the relationship threads about what makes a partner eligible, even people who say they didn't care about money are quick to throw in qualifiers about how the future spouse was on the path to making money. [/quote]
Options
Disable HTML in this message
Disable BB Code in this message
Disable smilies in this message
Review message
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics