Anonymous wrote:If I was the family with money, I would encourage my kid to go to their dream school and promise I would fund travel to see their significant other. I would much rather my kid go to the best fit college even if they spent two weekend a month visiting another school. If they are really meant to be, this should work. If they aren’t meant to be, then my kid should be at the best for school. But, I wouldn’t exert undue pressure over this. I would just point out the options to be together even if not at the same school and express my willingness to pay.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 17 year old junior has been dating the same girl since middle school. For the past year or so, both kids have been talking about getting married after college. She's a great kid, and they're great together, but it seems really early for that talk.
Both kids have very clear visions for what they want in college and career, and if it weren't for each other they'd make different choices, but they are very focused on going to college close together or at the same school.
I worry about this, but wanted to hear other people's thoughts. If your kid picked a school they wouldn't have otherwise picked, to be with a girlfriend/boyfriend, how did it work out? If your kid picked the school that was the best fit, over staying with a long time boyfriend/girlfriend, how did that work out? Any thoughts as I guide them?
Where they go to school doesn't really matter unless you just want a certain name on a degree due to marketing and hype. It's hit or miss at every college now, so pick the one that's cheapest or most convenient.
What’s cheapest for her isn’t what’s cheapest for him, both because their financial situation is different and because they live in different states.
Also where you go to college matters if, for example, you really want to be a nurse and are choosing between two schools one of which has nursing and one doesn’t.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 17 year old junior has been dating the same girl since middle school. For the past year or so, both kids have been talking about getting married after college. She's a great kid, and they're great together, but it seems really early for that talk.
Both kids have very clear visions for what they want in college and career, and if it weren't for each other they'd make different choices, but they are very focused on going to college close together or at the same school.
I worry about this, but wanted to hear other people's thoughts. If your kid picked a school they wouldn't have otherwise picked, to be with a girlfriend/boyfriend, how did it work out? If your kid picked the school that was the best fit, over staying with a long time boyfriend/girlfriend, how did that work out? Any thoughts as I guide them?
Where they go to school doesn't really matter unless you just want a certain name on a degree due to marketing and hype. It's hit or miss at every college now, so pick the one that's cheapest or most convenient.
Anonymous wrote:My 17 year old junior has been dating the same girl since middle school. For the past year or so, both kids have been talking about getting married after college. She's a great kid, and they're great together, but it seems really early for that talk.
Both kids have very clear visions for what they want in college and career, and if it weren't for each other they'd make different choices, but they are very focused on going to college close together or at the same school.
I worry about this, but wanted to hear other people's thoughts. If your kid picked a school they wouldn't have otherwise picked, to be with a girlfriend/boyfriend, how did it work out? If your kid picked the school that was the best fit, over staying with a long time boyfriend/girlfriend, how did that work out? Any thoughts as I guide them?
Anonymous wrote:Can you say more about why their paths are so different? Is one looking at a top school and the other less competitive? Does one want art school? I find it hard to believe that they couldn’t find “good enough” options for each at a medium or large school. They could consider different schools in the same city or within an hour or 2 if that opens up better options for each.
Anonymous wrote:OP here,
They would definitely live in separate dorms.
I think that is hard for me is the idea that they would both be compromising what they want in a college. They want really different things, and there isn’t a school that fits both well. I worry about a break up, but I also worry that they’ll stay together but there will be resentment.
Anonymous wrote:OP here,
They would definitely live in separate dorms.
I think that is hard for me is the idea that they would both be compromising what they want in a college. They want really different things, and there isn’t a school that fits both well. I worry about a break up, but I also worry that they’ll stay together but there will be resentment.