Anonymous wrote:I would step back and let him figure it out. Monitor so you know what is going on and be there when he wants to talk about things.
It’s a real gift to have a kid who is ready to spread his wings while he’s in high school when there are tons of second chances and opportunities to try other approaches and get feedback from parents as needed. If this means he gets a B freshman year, that’s ok.
A lot of kids love to be busy and are also good at figuring out what thing needs to be done which day and what can be missed. My kid was often double booked but he always figured it out.
IMO colleges really do love the kids who have accomplished a lot in high school and have figured out how to contribute, create, and lead across multiple domains. (Not surprising as this is the way it is in real life too). If your kid enjoys it, that’s great.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When does he work? It can’t be after school if he has sports everyday. Weekends?
Right now the plan would be all day Sunday and some Saturday nights. Which begs the question when does he do all of his volunteer hours? The answer is probably most holidays. I have no idea when studying or homework work will be done unless it’s after practice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If it helps, I have a bright but not an over-achiever rising 9th grade son. He'll be doing his club sport and take high level classes. I imagine he'll join a club or two at his high school and will do volunteer work, which is required by his school.
He's a little worried about having time for his sport (6/7 days per week) and homework, so I can't imagine trying to do that and juggle a part-time job as well.
Agree. This is ridiculous. I’m dreading the day we have to tell this kid to quit his job. At least you son has the self awareness to be nervous about his schedule.
Have you thought about what your decision points will be? I haven’t figured it out yet. Is it the first bad score on a test, his grades after the first month? I don’t want the be in a situation where we’re having this fight after a bad report card.
Quitting a job is easy. Recovering a grade or several that have slipped come mid semester is the part that sometimes can’t be undone.
Anonymous wrote:When does he work? It can’t be after school if he has sports everyday. Weekends?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If it helps, I have a bright but not an over-achiever rising 9th grade son. He'll be doing his club sport and take high level classes. I imagine he'll join a club or two at his high school and will do volunteer work, which is required by his school.
He's a little worried about having time for his sport (6/7 days per week) and homework, so I can't imagine trying to do that and juggle a part-time job as well.
Agree. This is ridiculous. I’m dreading the day we have to tell this kid to quit his job. At least you son has the self awareness to be nervous about his schedule.
Have you thought about what your decision points will be? I haven’t figured it out yet. Is it the first bad score on a test, his grades after the first month? I don’t want the be in a situation where we’re having this fight after a bad report card.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For a high schooler? You can give them advice but absent developmental delays, they probably need to make the final decision themselves.
I was like that and still thrive the busier I am. I did hit an overachiever wall in college, though, in trying to take more than the recommended number of courses frosh year including organic chemistry and high level physics and a few other classes. But I bounced back next semester with a smaller course load and one retake. I don't think anyone could have convinced me not to do it.
You might feel reassured reading "the self driven child."
Thanks for your perspective. I get what you are saying - but isn’t it a little too early to go with “you’re an adult now” for a freshman in HS?