Unregulated? My freshmen had actual contracts. Will maintain a 3.0. If you go below a B in a class, you will do something about it— office hours, tutoring center, something. We see your beautiful face on Zoom once a week, even if it’s 90 seconds of hello and goodbye. If you are going to walk alone at night or in a deserted area, you will carry your She’s Birdie. If you are in serious trouble, we are the first call. You keep your MD appts and take ADHD meds as prescribed. You sign consent for us to see grades and health records— but we will not request health records unless there is a life threatening issue. Etc. By sophomore year, these contracts were not necessary. We told the kids they were adulting well and making good choices, we were very proud of them and we tore the contracts up.
Basically, they helped set guidelines and minimum expectations during a time of transition for kids with EF deficits.
Half of DCUM is about yell about my helicopter parenting. But, there were reasons, including the ADHD. And when my kid was in over his head in math, he called us and we helped him find info and dates on P/F, dropping and taking a NM, then sent him to his advisor to develop a plan. He knew what to do (he called us, we focused on problem solving and kept the lectures to ourself) and he found a solution (taking a NM and carrying an under load) and dealt with the consequences (academic probation for an unapproved underload and a meeting with the Dean to approve his classes next semester). So much better than us finding out about an F a month after classes ended.
But even I’m perplexed about this “unregulated” adult child. Stalking your kids cell phone is tempting as a parent. But, as you can see here, it does more harm than good. You don’t want to be the parent who calls and yells at a kid for skipping class, only to learn that power was out to the building and the class was held online. Then you have a massive loss of trust and you kid turns location services off.
You can geofence your kid and put on a shock collar. Or you can trust in the 18 years you spent instilling values and teaching right and wrong and good decision making. Those are the choices.
If you have a genuine credible reason to believe there is abuse, head to the college, find her and contact the appropriate school officials and professionals immediately. If you are afraid she is drinking and having consensual sex— I’m sorry, but that’s very possible. And she’s a legal adult (even if the drinking age is 21). You can’t stop her.
If there is a history of substance abuse in your family, I’d discuss her genetic risk factors without moralizing.
If she isn’t being seen by a gyn and on BC, I’d tell her that you don’t agree with premarital sex, but it’s her life and her body and it’s more important to you that she be safe. Then tell her you are glad to schedule an appointment with the gyn on the next break where she can discuss BC needs privately with the MD, if she has such needs. Or, if she would prefer, she can go herself and you will never mention or question visits to the Gyn that go through health insurance (BC should be free under most insurance plans). At least she’s more likely to be healthy and less likely to get pregnant.
That’s it.
Here’s how the geofencing/ shock collar method goes. My ILs were fanatical when my SIL was in college and I was dating (then married to) DH. And she was a great kid who made good choices. They handed her a beeper so they could always reach her. And expected instant callback. She rolled her eyes, threw it in a drawer, and we had three years of The Beeper Wars. “It didnt go off” (they Fed Exed a new one). The batteries are dead (they fed exed new ones). They died again. More Fed ex. “I lost the beeper,” a new one appeared. I think my in-laws spent more on beepers and fed ex than tuition.
After three years of his parents calling us at 2am because their all around good kid DD was ignoring her beeper and begging us to drive to the college and find her (we lived 2 hours away. They were 7-8), DH finally stepped in and told them he no longer wanted any part of beeper wars. Thank Goodness. It was exhausting.
My SIL graduated with honors, got a graduate degree, because a self supporting professional and moved 16 hours away. She still screens her parents calls.
It’s funny now. But it was sad. All this panic and anger and ultimately a screwed up relationship because my SIL was doing what she was supposed to, when she was supposed to, but got tired of the long distance micromanaging and did the 1995 equivalent of turning off location services.
All of which is to say— stop cyber stalking your college kid. Maybe they are where they are supposed to be. Or, maybe they cut class to have have sex and smoke pot. But, even if she did, it’s out of your control. And she will never be honest with you when you are making it clear you don’t trust her.