Anonymous wrote:Every kid cannot have a 4.5 GPA and 1500 SATs. It is okay.
I graduated HS with under a 3.0 and about 1100 SAT and ended up with a PhD in engineering. Granted things were different 20 years ago, you can get by with pure grit sometimes. I eventually got my sh*t together.
My son is like yours. 3.3 GPA, 1200 SAT. Doesn't care. Doesn't study. There are schools that will accept the average kid. At a certain point, you have to let them be responsible for their actions or inaction and this is one of those cases. His college choices will be limited but there are a lot of kids just like him who turn out okay.
Have a glass of wine and relax.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
After the SAT, my husband and I had a hard but necessary conversation with him. We’ve decided to give him one more shot this summer. He’ll be enrolled in a structured, expensive SAT prep program, and our expectations are clear: he needs to put in real effort, at least 2 hours a day of studying, 5 days a week, and complete weekly practice tests after the course ends. If we see meaningful effort and improvement, we’ll continue supporting a 4-year college path. If not, we’ll be redirecting him toward community college.
This just sounds like a recipe for making someone who is miserable more miserable. Why are you forcing him into something you want, not him? You say you're "giving him one more shot," but at what? He doesn't want this.
Recently I had a plumbing emergency at my house and it took me all day on the phone, calling 10 different companies before finding someone available to come out to my house at 7pm. That guy made $600. That experience taught me that if I knew a teenager in this town I'd be telling him to become a plumber as they are clearly in shortage. There are many pathways in life that don't involve high SATs and a 4 year college.
This was my thought. Blood and stones. Horses and water. It's not going to happen the way you envision, so time to start changing your vision.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
After the SAT, my husband and I had a hard but necessary conversation with him. We’ve decided to give him one more shot this summer. He’ll be enrolled in a structured, expensive SAT prep program, and our expectations are clear: he needs to put in real effort, at least 2 hours a day of studying, 5 days a week, and complete weekly practice tests after the course ends. If we see meaningful effort and improvement, we’ll continue supporting a 4-year college path. If not, we’ll be redirecting him toward community college.
This just sounds like a recipe for making someone who is miserable more miserable. Why are you forcing him into something you want, not him? You say you're "giving him one more shot," but at what? He doesn't want this.
Recently I had a plumbing emergency at my house and it took me all day on the phone, calling 10 different companies before finding someone available to come out to my house at 7pm. That guy made $600. That experience taught me that if I knew a teenager in this town I'd be telling him to become a plumber as they are clearly in shortage. There are many pathways in life that don't involve high SATs and a 4 year college.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe he has ADHD and needs medication. Maybe he’s just a typical screen add it whose attention span and motivation have been zapped by Instagram and video games. Either way, intense ST prep is akin to “the beatings will continue until morale improves”
Help him get a summer job with lots of hours. Figure out how to get him exercising every day. Keep him off screens and games. Tour realistic colleges this summer, including community college, and help him map his future. Don’t act disappointed when you look at Hood or Christopher Newport (or wherever). Those are all ways to show your love and support.