Anonymous wrote:Sports helps for sure. I always hear parents sneer at those of us who have our kiddos enrolled in sports but those kids for the most part are typically late to the party (hehe) since they have so many sporting commitments.
Anonymous wrote:Fairfax County native here. Over 20 years in “nice” Fairfax County neighborhood. Raised 4DC - now college graduates and students.
Most shocking are parents who buy booze, host coed sleepovers, host or organize happy hours and or tailgate ahead of youth sports games.
Several years ago EMTs extricated both a drunk mom AND a HS student from the stadium bathroom and had to triage/prioritize the student and transport her first - both were vomiting.
The parents throw huge parties for themselves early on and so this grows to involve their preteens so by middle school the partying parents have socially engineered, set expectations and paved the way to have a party house for DC!
What’s changed since DH and I were Fairfax County teenagers: parents are home for the parties. They buy and supply it all.
The whole mindset of HS social life equivalent to a Tailgate State college experience! Parents fully invested in this and drive the narrative; tailgating, pre-partying, after-parties, etc.
Can think of a few HS students who had DWI charges by senior year.
Or, parents take a vacation and leave the teens home alone and low key encouraging DC to have a few friends over, no questions asked.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When does the partying start?
--9th grader has zero interest in that scene but wondering if that will change.
Kids are very scheduled these days compared to the 90s.
PP and hate to tell you this but 6th grade can begin but early partying hits stride in 7th/8th.
Something to consider as some FCPS have 6/7/8 in middle school.
Anonymous wrote:When does the partying start?
--9th grader has zero interest in that scene but wondering if that will change.
Kids are very scheduled these days compared to the 90s.
Anonymous wrote:some popular kids have tons of parties, but my dd isn't popular so she never attends.
bbb863 wrote:I went to a "top" public high school in a wealthy part of Florida. The party culture was insane. Kids from my AP classes were blacking out every weekend, smoking whatever they could find, hooking up with multiple partners, etc. It wasn't fringe behavior; that was the prevailing culture.
I’m really hoping FCPS is different. I know teen drinking and smoking rates are down nationwide, but I’m also hoping that the high school culture here is less hedonistic and reckless than what I grew up with. Not just the same mess with better college outcomes.
Would love a reality check from those who’ve been through the high school years here.