Anonymous wrote:Don’t most freshman drink? I didn’t, and I definitely felt like the odd one out back in my college days.
Anonymous wrote:She’s an adult. Let her make her own choices.
Anonymous wrote:She’s an adult. Let her make her own choices.
Anonymous wrote:My daughter is a freshman in Vtech. She has started drinking with other college kids in dorm. She has denied it and continues to do it. She has started skipping classes. As she is 18 yrs old but under 21 yrs old, Can i as a parent ask for help from the college counselling center? What can i do before it becomes too late to do anything?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Freshman drink, do drugs and have sex. The bigger issue would be not doing those things. Encourage safety and land the helicopter.
Oh you’re one of those parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parenting is ok, it is just now parenting a young adult. I assume the parents are paying college tuition so they, indeed, are involved if this is the case. Kids need to stop thinking they can go party and waste four years on parents’ money.
Okay? Fine? So you're suggesting that the parent threaten the student that the tuition money will be gone unless they comply? That's a straight-up recipe to get your kid to never trust or go to you again in any situation.
OP - This situation sucks. But she's a freshman. She's 18 and she's experimenting with her freedom and her new friends. I would be big money that she'll be tired of all of this by Christmas break and start the next semester off right. If not, you have your chance to speak to her then. But- for now- don't lose your daughter's trust by attempting to go behind her back for some sort of in loco parentis actions by the administration. For one, they probably will shake their head at you and, in addition, she's an adult.
Hold on tight and trust in your daughter.
Um, the daughter is already not coming to her parents or trusting them if she’s lying about what she’s doing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parenting is ok, it is just now parenting a young adult. I assume the parents are paying college tuition so they, indeed, are involved if this is the case. Kids need to stop thinking they can go party and waste four years on parents’ money.
Okay? Fine? So you're suggesting that the parent threaten the student that the tuition money will be gone unless they comply? That's a straight-up recipe to get your kid to never trust or go to you again in any situation.
OP - This situation sucks. But she's a freshman. She's 18 and she's experimenting with her freedom and her new friends. I would be big money that she'll be tired of all of this by Christmas break and start the next semester off right. If not, you have your chance to speak to her then. But- for now- don't lose your daughter's trust by attempting to go behind her back for some sort of in loco parentis actions by the administration. For one, they probably will shake their head at you and, in addition, she's an adult.
Hold on tight and trust in your daughter.
Anonymous wrote:Freshman drink, do drugs and have sex. The bigger issue would be not doing those things. Encourage safety and land the helicopter.