Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is she actually ready for college if it was like pulling teeth to get her to apply and now she isn’t interested in any of her choices?
+1. It’s very strange that OP thinks she should have pushed more and made more decisions for her daughter. This is their process, not ours.
I don't think that's what she's saying. She regrets not having provided stronger guidance at a more opportune time.
Right. At several points she had the opportunity to submit more applications, said I'll do it later, then she said she didn't want to bother. I should have insisted more, but I didn't want to cause more conflict and stress.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She got into 7 schools. She’ll be fine at one of those 7. Don’t “what if” yourself into unhappiness.
Now she is talking about Majors more specifically, and some of the schools she didn't apply to are stronger than even the great school. So I am second-guessing. She was not ready and did not have a clear picture at the time it mattered most, and I should have done more for her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is she actually ready for college if it was like pulling teeth to get her to apply and now she isn’t interested in any of her choices?
+1. It’s very strange that OP thinks she should have pushed more and made more decisions for her daughter. This is their process, not ours.
I don't think that's what she's saying. She regrets not having provided stronger guidance at a more opportune time.
Right. At several points she had the opportunity to submit more applications, said I'll do it later, then she said she didn't want to bother. I should have insisted more, but I didn't want to cause more conflict and stress.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is she actually ready for college if it was like pulling teeth to get her to apply and now she isn’t interested in any of her choices?
+1. It’s very strange that OP thinks she should have pushed more and made more decisions for her daughter. This is their process, not ours.
I don't think that's what she's saying. She regrets not having provided stronger guidance at a more opportune time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is she actually ready for college if it was like pulling teeth to get her to apply and now she isn’t interested in any of her choices?
+1. It’s very strange that OP thinks she should have pushed more and made more decisions for her daughter. This is their process, not ours.
I don't think that's what she's saying. She regrets not having provided stronger guidance at a more opportune time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is she actually ready for college if it was like pulling teeth to get her to apply and now she isn’t interested in any of her choices?
+1. It’s very strange that OP thinks she should have pushed more and made more decisions for her daughter. This is their process, not ours.
Anonymous wrote:By senior year of high school, the kids themselves need to be in charge of their college application process. It's their experience. It's their lives. It's their careers. It's their relationships. At 17/18, they need to have a little agency and take ownership of where they want to go school. Parents are there for guidance and a financial reality check. But otherwise, the students need to own their college choices. Otherwise it leads to second guessing, detachment, a feeling of floating through life. Kids should feel a sense of accomplishment as they settle on their college choices. You can't gift this to a kid. They are much happier when they feel they've earned it and made the choices themselves. And if a kid is uninterested in their future, well, they'll learn quickly that flaking leads nowhere and they'll adjust quickly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The vast majority of students change their mind about majors. Don't choose a school based on one specific major. If she's happy with one of the schools she's accepted to, get excited about that one. It doesn't matter if some hypothetical additional school is "stronger" (whatever that means) in a specific major.
She's not thrilled, no. She's okay with it. She would absolutely be happier about some of the schools she didn't apply to. I am really kicking myself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The vast majority of students change their mind about majors. Don't choose a school based on one specific major. If she's happy with one of the schools she's accepted to, get excited about that one. It doesn't matter if some hypothetical additional school is "stronger" (whatever that means) in a specific major.
She's not thrilled, no. She's okay with it. She would absolutely be happier about some of the schools she didn't apply to. I am really kicking myself.
This sounds more like anxiety/the grass is greener than a thought-out decision that another school would be better. It's your job to remind her why she chose to apply there in the first place.
Anonymous wrote:Is she actually ready for college if it was like pulling teeth to get her to apply and now she isn’t interested in any of her choices?