Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why did parents put up with it? (1) it was the 1970s -- parents were less involved, (2) how many people really confront these schools on such practices, even today? How long were they publishign the list of where students were going to college in the NCS paper, recently? (3) most kids were not traumatized by it, but obviously some were.
You have a DD at Holton now, right?
Anonymous wrote:Why did parents put up with it? (1) it was the 1970s -- parents were less involved, (2) how many people really confront these schools on such practices, even today? How long were they publishign the list of where students were going to college in the NCS paper, recently? (3) most kids were not traumatized by it, but obviously some were.
Anonymous wrote:
Back in the 1970s at NCS they used to post a list of where each girl applied and then they put check marks by the schools she got in, a master list put up in a hallway. It was taken down when a girl attempted suicide.
I smell a rat ... who would know all this? And what parent would put up with it -- even before suicide.
Anonymous wrote:The competitive parenting around this issue is real and ugly. And it is much worse at the "big 3" schools than other privates, that also send kids to great colleges.
OP, be proud of your DC for showing the self-awareness to not get caught up in all that.
Back in the 1970s at NCS they used to post a list of where each girl applied and then they put check marks by the schools she got in, a master list put up in a hallway. It was taken down when a girl attempted suicide.
Anonymous wrote:19:52/20:19 again. I just want to emphasize that whatever you're feeling right now when you deal with other parents, even if it's understandable, is unimportant in the scheme of things. Even if the letters are disappointing, you only have 2 more months to ride it out and then you'll never see these people again. What IS important is that your kid, who has presumably done his best all along, sees that you're happy with the college he gets into, that you help him get perspective on all this, and that you're proud of him. That's really all that matters in the long run.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Good" schools are a status symbol among the kids. Some can't wait to add Yale or Stanford to their FB profile. I guess Harvard, too.
Kids should be rightfully proud of gaining admission to those schools. Dismissing it as a "status" symbol betrays your own insecurity and envy.