Anonymous wrote:I have written on here before and received great advice. My daughter, only child made a mess of the first 1 1/2 years of HS and did not do well on the ACT due to test anxiety. She's a good kid and when I see her friends who got into college, its not like they are discussing Shakespeare and she is talking about the Kardashians.
She is puling B's senior year and wants to apply to colleges once her transcript for the fall is on file. What I am seeing is that the only colleges she has a chance of getting into are more party schools. What she needs is a school with a very supportive atmosphere where kids who might have been late bloomers can work with other students who are serious about achieving, not a bunch who want to get drunk every night.
One thought is that we live in a state with a very good flagship state school. We have called them and they want to see 30 community college credits above a B. She is very interested in them and they have provided a person at the school who went the community college route to "show her the ropes" about how to work towards her goals. In other words, community college would provide a second chance for her.
What kills me, and I am a very involved parent is her coming home crying about how all her friends are going away and she feels left out. She understands that she screwed up for a while and did not put in the work. I told her that its not where you start but where you finish and some of those kids will never even make it to graduation or transfer back home. I also mention that if in 4 1/2 years they are sitting in a stadium in the exact same place graduating at the same school, who cares about where the first year was done. But we were all seventeen once and she is heartbroken.
Any ideas on what else I can tell her? She really wants to get out of the house once HS is over.
Anonymous wrote:Encourage her to live on campus even if the school is local.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's wrong with the party schools? I know lots of successful people who went to schools like WVU, had an awesome time and then got their masters at other colleges.
OP: do not think she has the maturity to deal with a school where that is the priority. Not expecting her to live like a nun, but really want the emphasis to be on academics. She is the type who if the group is serious about school, she will be serious about school. If they are serious about partying, that is what she will do.
There are studious students at every school and there are party-hardy students at every school (except maybe BYU or Wheaton College). The students attending a college are not one monolithic group.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's wrong with the party schools? I know lots of successful people who went to schools like WVU, had an awesome time and then got their masters at other colleges.
OP: do not think she has the maturity to deal with a school where that is the priority. Not expecting her to live like a nun, but really want the emphasis to be on academics. She is the type who if the group is serious about school, she will be serious about school. If they are serious about partying, that is what she will do.
Anonymous wrote:Encourage her to live on campus even if the school is local.
Anonymous wrote:What's wrong with the party schools? I know lots of successful people who went to schools like WVU, had an awesome time and then got their masters at other colleges.