Anonymous wrote:Great thread here, my kid feels this too. Totally done with this area and the other students in school. Wants to go to a very outdoors college with laid back vibe but still work hard without as many cutthroat people.
Trying to do all this btw not easy.
Anonymous wrote:There's a lot to be said for getting to be a new person when you start college. I was a wallflower in HS, but went to an out of state private for college and was super social, becoming student body president and the graduation speaker. Sometimes kids don't grow up to be the same person that thry were at 5, 10, 13 or even 16 yo. I know not everyone makes this sort of leap, but it does happen.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I ended up at our local LAC. I was headed for one about 2 hours away, but had an epiphany after HS graduation that the college would not be a good fit (very, very Greek, very wealthy) for me. So I ended up at the local LAC (living on campus), which was a good fit for me in terms of academics, EC opportunities, and macro social life (no Greek system), but the social continuation of HS was constraining and probably still has negative effects for me to this day. In fact, I've been mulling it even more over the last few months.
Please don't ignore your DC's wishes. You can be realistic about budget, etc, but listen to them about the social. There are probably ways to make both happen. GL to your DC.
Anonymous wrote:One of mine went to VT with one of his best friends from HS and still seems to hang mostly with HS friends. But I know plenty of kids go there and never see HS friends. I think DS's experience is more the exception. Most of these schools are really big and you CAN continue HS social life but only if you - and your HS friends - want it to. It takes that desire and real proactive initiative to maintain those friendships.
Also, the fact that the top 10% can get into UVA (and really it's more like top 5%) doesn't mean all of that top 5% only go to UVA.
Anonymous wrote:OP here--I am worried that even if they go OOS their social experience will be the same as they are who they are, I don't tell them this as it will be seen as negative. We don't meet need. It seems that most schools will offer enough merit aid to meet UVAs cost--so around 50K-UM and and Ivy's being the exception.
Anonymous wrote:These schools are huge. You don't need to see anyone from high school. That shouldn't be a driving factor in his college decision. He doesn't need hours and hours of distance in order to have the independence and growth. Unless you're a crazy mom and just show up to see him all the time![]()
I don't know why people are obsessed with people going away. He can travel, study abroad, get internships, join clubs, play a new sport. There are many ways to expand your horizons. If cost is a factor, then you need to clearly tell him what you're able to swing. Then he applies to a variety of schools and go from there.
Anonymous wrote:My son. Headed to an Ivy next year though--helps me stomach the high price tag a little more.