Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid worked hard to get accepted into college of his choice and you bet I will brag. If someone feels sensitive, that's their own fuckin' problem.
Lots of kids work very, very hard to get into the college of their choice. The parents who don't brag come off as the most impressive. Its not about feeling sensitive, its about how you look. But given this post I imagine you've already created that impression, so go at it.
Anonymous wrote:My kid worked hard to get accepted into college of his choice and you bet I will brag. If someone feels sensitive, that's their own fuckin' problem.
Anonymous wrote:Funny, no one complains about all of the National Signing Day photos all over the internet and in the newspapers. Why is it okay to celebrate athletic successes while we are reluctant to do the same for academics? The people on this forum belittling students/parents for posting college acceptances are the first ones who would get a kick out of seeing their kid's name in the Post as AllMet, for example.
Anonymous wrote:All my friends post where their children are going with their child in a sweatshirt with the school name. Our school (that has a uniform) allows kids to wear the sweatshirt of the school that they will attend. The kids post pictures of themselves in the sweatshirt on Instagram. My son has quite a few friends that signed letters of intent over the past month. Their school posted a picture of the kids and their parent re-post. Most of them have twitter accounts and they will tweet where they have verbally committed, they will retweet any mention of them committing (which is usually announced by the paper or the school).
Early on I have a few friends that will post, we got an acceptance so relieved or something like that.
If you read a post like that and think it is bragging you may be a little insecure. We have aunt, uncles, cousins and this is how we communicate.
Anonymous wrote:The norm is to post where you are going, not acceptances. So if he's decided to go to a school he posts University of XX, class of 2019.
Our principal specifically asked kids to be sensitive of others and not post acceptances.
Anonymous wrote:DD delayed posting because a close friend has applied to the same school and DD didn't know the outcome for a while, and then the friend's outcome wasn't positive.