Anonymous wrote:She will be fine. There are plenty, I mean PLENTY of low average people in jobs all over corporate America. Living in the DC area where people are so competitive and achievement oriented gives you a skewed sense of what kind of life someone should strive for.
Here are some career options that aren't super lucrative but that can be fulfilling and people I know in these careers have good and happy lives.
1. Is she fashionable and into clothing? There are careers in retail. I used to work in corporate HR for a large, well respected retail company. She could get into retail management. Most of the managers I dealt with there were low average intelligence. Sure, she will always have to work black Friday and the day after Christmas, but it isn't so bad.
2. Nursery School teacher, if she likes children. The nursery teachers I know are incredibly happy with their jobs and vary widely in range of intelligence. Some went to smaller regional colleges and some have advanced degrees from Ivy League schools. The one thing they all have in common is that little people truly make them happy and they love helping them meet developmental milestones and love teaching them how to socialize with peers. It isn't rocket science if you have good management and a strong educational foundation.
3. Dental Hygenist. Check out the median pay: http://www.bls.gov/ooh/healthcare/dental-hygienists.htm
She doesn't even need a BA, though, if your family has the means, she should certainly have one.
4.Property Management. I have friends from high school who work for property management companies in various sales and admin roles. They make between 60-75k and some are of low average intelligence and they are successful and happy. They will never be the big boss and they are ok with that.
If she needs a lot of support, find her a smaller college (not a party place though - avoid cities like New Orleans, Charleston, etc) where she will have individual attention and professors who will encourage her.
Some colleges to consider (that aren't too far from here):
Lynchburg College
McDaniel College
Goucher College
Lycoming College
Hood College
Anonymous wrote:Thanks~
Her people skills are really really good already. She has a part time job as a hostess at a restaurant on the weekends, and really enjoys being around people ALL the time. She's really chatty, even with adults who are total strangers.
So while she does not have the intelligence, she definitely has other gifts...(and beauty, which honestly I know will help her out!-does that sound awful too?? lol)
Anonymous wrote:I realize that this is an odd post. And I feel odd saying that.
But here's the god honest truth: our daughter has always appeared to us to be just NOT like our two sons. Both our sons are whip smart-straight A's honors, AP, etc.
Our daughter is just NOT.
We've had her tested independently, the outcome said she has "low average intelligence". Then school tested her, and the result was the same: low average. it didn't surprise us.
So the news isn't awful-she's average, just on the low side of average.
Here's my struggle. First, I come from a family of above averages. My boys are above average. My experience is with school/academic focused lives.
I am totally and completely fine with her being low average (there has to be a spectrum, right? otherwise we would be all the same!)
But I don't really know what to do with her. its like I am raising an alien. She's 16 now, so I am thinking about things for her like will she go to college? (In my life, college was NOT optional. And my brain tells me no one can possibly support themselves without a college degree--can they??) She wants to go to college, but I worry...she needs SO much support from us now just to get through high school. How the heck will she manage college?
And then my mind wanders: how will she support herself in general? I try to ask her at times what she is interested in, what does she like, what does she enjoy. She also has inattentive ADHD, so that coupled with her personality, I know she wouldn't be able to do a corporate job. But at 16, she really has no clue what she wants to do. She knows she likes planning things (parties etc) but she isn't detail oriented, so things like event management would be a disaster I think.
This really isn't a post asking for opinions about what she could do for a career--what I am really asking is, does anyone else have a kid who just plain isn't that smart? And how do you approach dealing with them? I feel like my mind needs to open into other possibilities for her (other than the going away to college/graduating and going into corporate America track my boys will surely follow). But I don't even know what those other tracks are.
I'm feeling a little lost. She's 16 years old and I feel as clueless about her future as she does. And I feel horrible as a parent posting something saying "my kid isn't smart", thank god this forum is anonymous!!!!
Anonymous wrote:What does she say when you ask her this question? Another question to ask would be "why do you want to go to college?" Is it because she thinks it's expected, because her siblings are going? Is it because she hears her friends talking about it? Does she just want the experience of it? If she is struggling to get through high school, I can't imagine that the idea of struggling through college classes sounds like any fun at all. A couple of my friends struggled badly in college. One finished with a LOT of help from her parents who were nearby and then did nothing with her degree. The other quit her junior year.
I would start talking about how ANY school after high school could be fun. Culinary school, cosmetology school, or even taking some fun classes at a local college (satellite campus or community college) in an interest area of hers. For kids with ADHD, it helps tremendously to find something that they are passionate about, because it makes getting through the more boring parts of class and homework that much easier. Until she finds that thing she really loves and wants to do, sending her to college might wind up being a waste of time.
Well seeing how this is a 6 year old thread, your advice may not be very helpful.
What does she say when you ask her this question? Another question to ask would be "why do you want to go to college?" Is it because she thinks it's expected, because her siblings are going? Is it because she hears her friends talking about it? Does she just want the experience of it? If she is struggling to get through high school, I can't imagine that the idea of struggling through college classes sounds like any fun at all. A couple of my friends struggled badly in college. One finished with a LOT of help from her parents who were nearby and then did nothing with her degree. The other quit her junior year.
I would start talking about how ANY school after high school could be fun. Culinary school, cosmetology school, or even taking some fun classes at a local college (satellite campus or community college) in an interest area of hers. For kids with ADHD, it helps tremendously to find something that they are passionate about, because it makes getting through the more boring parts of class and homework that much easier. Until she finds that thing she really loves and wants to do, sending her to college might wind up being a waste of time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you homeschool her?
I think the reason your post is off putting is the attitude that people with average IQs are not college material, and can't be as successful as you.
IQ and success are not correlated once you are in the average or above range.
I think it may be detrimental to your daughter if you express your opinion to her the way you are here.
I actually don't think you should treat her college process any different than your other children. Going to school is a skill, being good at it does not help you with anything except doing well at school, it does not make you a better employee or employer.
You should google a+ schools for b students.
No, we have her in a private online high school. We considered homeschool but I personally don't think I could do it on my end.
Look, perhaps I am just not clearly saying what I am asking for and where I am coming from. I KNOW that having a high IQ does not necessarily mean success, and vice versa. All I am saying, is that my OWN personal experience in my OWN family is that when we got to the point my daughter is at (where we were deciding upon "next steps" after I was graduating from high school), I was in a VERY different position than I find myself in today with my own daughter. I was a student with a high IQ, coming from parents with a high IQ, with a future that was decided upon in advance. There was no question that I was going to college, the only discussions were about where I was going to college.
I find myself in the position of having a child who potentially may NOT take that route. Not only does she have a lower end IQ, she also has ADHD to complicate things. And she isn't a B student, she is a C student at best. And I am ill-equipped to help her, because I don't know where to start. We don't have access to a high school guidance counselor or career center to talk this all out. I don't even know if its okay that she does NOT go to college. All the statistics I read show college graduates making 50% more income than non college grads. it scares me to think she might not go, if that's the case.
This post is not about me being pretentious and being disappointed in my daughter. I am NOT disappointed. I am just unfamiliar with the territory I find myself in. I don't think everyone on this board is smart, not smart, or anywhere in between. Im just seeking out someone in my position who knows of resources I can use to help my kid.
I cant understand what is so offensive about this question.
Anonymous wrote:I realize that this is an odd post. And I feel odd saying that.
But here's the god honest truth: our daughter has always appeared to us to be just NOT like our two sons. Both our sons are whip smart-straight A's honors, AP, etc.
Our daughter is just NOT.
We've had her tested independently, the outcome said she has "low average intelligence". Then school tested her, and the result was the same: low average. it didn't surprise us.
So the news isn't awful-she's average, just on the low side of average.
Here's my struggle. First, I come from a family of above averages. My boys are above average. My experience is with school/academic focused lives.
I am totally and completely fine with her being low average (there has to be a spectrum, right? otherwise we would be all the same!)
But I don't really know what to do with her. its like I am raising an alien. She's 16 now, so I am thinking about things for her like will she go to college? (In my life, college was NOT optional. And my brain tells me no one can possibly support themselves without a college degree--can they??) She wants to go to college, but I worry...she needs SO much support from us now just to get through high school. How the heck will she manage college?
And then my mind wanders: how will she support herself in general? I try to ask her at times what she is interested in, what does she like, what does she enjoy. She also has inattentive ADHD, so that coupled with her personality, I know she wouldn't be able to do a corporate job. But at 16, she really has no clue what she wants to do. She knows she likes planning things (parties etc) but she isn't detail oriented, so things like event management would be a disaster I think.
This really isn't a post asking for opinions about what she could do for a career--what I am really asking is, does anyone else have a kid who just plain isn't that smart? And how do you approach dealing with them? I feel like my mind needs to open into other possibilities for her (other than the going away to college/graduating and going into corporate America track my boys will surely follow). But I don't even know what those other tracks are.
I'm feeling a little lost. She's 16 years old and I feel as clueless about her future as she does. And I feel horrible as a parent posting something saying "my kid isn't smart", thank god this forum is anonymous!!!!