Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I genuinely do not know why any parent would let their kid go to that school. It has been exceptionally toxic for years.
The kind of kid who gets into Yale has the kind of parent who churns out suicidal kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I genuinely do not know why any parent would let their kid go to that school. It has been exceptionally toxic for years.
The kind of kid who gets into Yale has the kind of parent who churns out suicidal kids.
I don't get it. Having loving, supportive parents who push you academically churns out a suicidal kid? You're making crap up. The kids I know at Ivies have wonderfully involved, supportive, and nurturing parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I genuinely do not know why any parent would let their kid go to that school. It has been exceptionally toxic for years.
The kind of kid who gets into Yale has the kind of parent who churns out suicidal kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They made kids sign documents in the hospital agreeing to leave. They escorted kids to their dorms to move out in a matter of hours. They restrict the ability to return after a break and make applying for reinstatement a stressor on kids.
This is just awful. I’ve been in the ED with my teen when they were having urges to self-harm and needed to be admitted to inpatient. That is a real crisis moment. I could not imagine school admin/school hospital staff forcing us to sign papers kicking them out of college on the spot. Have they no decency? Isn’t the student already under a lot of stress in that moment? Cruel and disgusting. And then removing them from their supports and practitioners. Just awful.
It’s Yale. Most Yale grads find a way to share that fact within a few minutes of one’s meeting them for the first time (unlike other elite school grads) and I am convinced because the school experience is so traumatizing that they wear it as a badge of survivor honor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They made kids sign documents in the hospital agreeing to leave. They escorted kids to their dorms to move out in a matter of hours. They restrict the ability to return after a break and make applying for reinstatement a stressor on kids.
This is just awful. I’ve been in the ED with my teen when they were having urges to self-harm and needed to be admitted to inpatient. That is a real crisis moment. I could not imagine school admin/school hospital staff forcing us to sign papers kicking them out of college on the spot. Have they no decency? Isn’t the student already under a lot of stress in that moment? Cruel and disgusting. And then removing them from their supports and practitioners. Just awful.
Anonymous wrote:They made kids sign documents in the hospital agreeing to leave. They escorted kids to their dorms to move out in a matter of hours. They restrict the ability to return after a break and make applying for reinstatement a stressor on kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Schools are not equip to deal with mental health challenges.
Read the article, Yale is way beyond this. They were cruel.
Not really. Schools cannot handle that kind of mental health issues and in a semester or two, its not going to get that much better nor is the right environment. Those students need to be hospitalized and intensive treatment.
NP: Read the article. Many students are relying on the healthcare and supports provided including their friends nearby. Yale certainly has enough money to figure out something in between kicking out students and having students crash & burn on campus indefinitely. There has to be some middle ground.
Anonymous wrote:IMHO, Yale is right to require students take a leave of absence after a suicide attempt, but wrong to put up any barriers to return the following semester or the one after that (depending on when the attempt took place). They should expunge any grades from the lost semester.
A suicide attempt--but not necessarily suicidal thoughts--show that a student needs serious mental health attention that can't be fully addressed while also trying to attend to the classes that in many cases are at minimum exacerbating the situation.