Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:seems pretty steep! what is that expected to cover? clothes, haircuts, toiletries, midnight pizza? Beer et al?Anonymous wrote:DD's college is a few miles from an expensive city. I asked several moms I knew of older girls at the same college. We decided on $400/month.
This is my dd too. She's not a pizza and beer girl. But she likes good sushi and organic snacks. She wore a uniform in high school and mostly athletic-type clothes out of school. So she really didn't have a wardrobe. The girls at her college dress nice and they go out to nice places. She and her friends have a "put together" look that I have yet to achieve. She has good grades and has had some awesome internships so we feel it's working fine.
Anonymous wrote:Or it proves they have nice machines. The ones at my college most certainly didn't have directions on them!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't get the obsession some parents of younger kids about the laundry. If your 8 yr old does laundry, fine, but I agree that it's not a life skill that must be mastered before college. I didn't want kids in the laundry room (except for drop off and pick up). When they visit home from college, it's with clean clothes, so I know they've figured out the laundry thing.
My roommate in college (and most of the girls in my dorm) had to be taught by the RAs how to do their laundry. Who sends their kid to college and doesn't teach them this? Anyway, many of them missed the part about sorting white clothes from non-white clothes and that it was important to read the tag. They ended up with very expensive clothing shrunk down to doll size and white clothes stained with all kinds of colors. I guess they just threw everything in together. I bet they wanted more spending money too b/c they ruined their clothes. If I wanted money to spend, I got a job. I babysat all through college and worked as a summer nanny. I used the money for books, car insurance, gas and spending money. I wouldn't give my kid spending money in college. That's what jobs are for!
Anonymous wrote:Weirdly enough, $400 a month sounds low to me. When I was in college, I started the year off with $3000 from summer jobs and that was sufficient for every year but senior year (when renting a Selectric for a semester to work on my senior thesis busted my budget). As the Selectric reference no doubt suggests, this was a long time ago and in an era where kids didn't have credit cards. Given that I must have spent $300+ a month then and wasn't doing anything extravagant (but wasn't feeling cash-strapped either), I'm guessing the $400 isn't the whole picture.
At any rate, I'm wondering whether you're sending kids to school with credit and/or debit cards as well as cash and whether things like textbooks and transportation home come out of the $400 or whether they get put on a card or paid by parents in some other way.
The other thing we'll be figuring out is whether we do a lump sum for the school year or per semester vs. monthly or as-needed infusions. Because it was summer earnings, I had the lump sum scenario and I thought it imposed a useful discipline. DH, whose family lived much closer to school and saw him regularly during the year, had kind of random infusions. I think that would have made me crazy, but it didn't bother him.
Anonymous wrote:I don't get the obsession some parents of younger kids about the laundry. If your 8 yr old does laundry, fine, but I agree that it's not a life skill that must be mastered before college. I didn't want kids in the laundry room (except for drop off and pick up). When they visit home from college, it's with clean clothes, so I know they've figured out the laundry thing.
Anonymous wrote:I worked every semester of college for my spending money. It helped me manage my time better and it helped me
Land my first job out of college (as I had interned at the office my senior year). Working is not a bad thing!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I send allowance once a month. Keep in mind the need for food, toiletries (tampons, deodorant, gum, sunscreen) and school supplies (post-its, tabs, special pens) and random things that come up - new charger, college t-shirt, seeing a movie, bday gifts for new friends, etc.
Think about what kind of food plan your kid will have. The bigger the food plan, the less the money we send. I did not want my kids getting a job their freshman year. Adjust to college, make new friends, get used to running all your own errands, doing all your own laundry, etc.
I did not want my kids to get stuck for cash. I started out sending $80 per month, and after two months asked my son how that was working out. When he told me that it was okay but he was being very careful the last week and a half to make sure it lasted, I upped it to $120 a month. That works better for him (he gets his hair cut once a month).
When my DD started college, I started her at $120 a month and she never said a word about money being tight.
If you are waiting for college for these things, you are too late. My 8 yr old does his own laundry.
Anonymous wrote:seems pretty steep! what is that expected to cover? clothes, haircuts, toiletries, midnight pizza? Beer et al?Anonymous wrote:DD's college is a few miles from an expensive city. I asked several moms I knew of older girls at the same college. We decided on $400/month.