Anonymous wrote:I graduate college with 2.7 GPA did not join clubs, do internships or anything academic related. I did go to parties and bars four nights a week, had girlfriends and had fun.
My parents did not pay. All I needed was 2.0 to Matriculate.
Guess what other than having a harder time landing job and having to do a low paid job first year out of school had no effect on life. Having degree is only important thing.
It took me to around 33 to stop partying and get married, have three kids, big house and big job. Boys mature later many not till 40
Anonymous wrote:Have he tried therapy? It seems a shame that he is not excited about any field or learning. Obviously, he is getting much less out of your investment than he could. Plus, who will write him good references?
I hope you have not communicated that this bare minimum/check the box performance is adequate. I suspect you have not though. To some extent, we get the kid we get.
I would hold him to a higher standard (if he is going to school on my dime)...but your options for making this happen are entirely based upon the relationship you have set up in the past.
I am very blessed to have a kid who does care and try her best. I wish you all well, and am sure that you have tried many thing for many years.
Anonymous wrote:I'd focus on encouraging him to pursue work experiences, that's what will really matter once he has the degree.
Anonymous wrote:Ooh gross- did the PP say ROTC should be mandatory for all boys?
That is awful and stereotypical and makes me cringe so much. No - not every kid or boy "needs" ROTC and/or should be subjected to military service against their will.
-mom of a very disciplined, hard working college student that would HATE ROTC and would not benefit from forced ROTC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you want to support the chugging along, that is fine, but what is your child majoring in? What are their plans for after graduation? What skills will they offer to a prospective employer? Sounds like they would be great for sales - good social skills etc, but sales in what? Being social is awesome, but they should at least begin to understand that at some point, they will need to stand on their own two feet, and college is the time to fully prepare for that.
*unless you are planning on supporting them indefinitely.
I work for a major pharmaceutical company and our campus recruiters screen out wannabe sales reps with less than a 3.3 GPA. We recruit many sorority, fraternity and student-athlete types from fun colleges but they still must have respectable grades and dress the part. 2.0-2.5 GPA is simply atrocious. How do you spin that? Also, the mere existence of a social life does not infer Type A boisterous social skills our recruiters are after.
Anonymous wrote:We know a few young men like this and they seem to quietly drop out. It’s easy to pretend for a few years, but once they’re out of sync with their graduating class, they can’t pretend for long. Parents rarely admit it, so watch for omissions.
They’ll lack milestone internships e.g., on the Hill, California, NYC parents and kids boast about in person and on Facebook and LinkedIn. They don’t go study abroad. You’ll never hear well-defined career or grad school plans; parents will be vague and wishy-washy about how the child is doing. And you won’t see graduation ceremony photos on their Facebook four years after high school.
The young men quietly move back home and/or are working dead-end jobs that are beneath anyone with a BA.
Anonymous wrote:We know a few young men like this and they seem to quietly drop out. It’s easy to pretend for a few years, but once they’re out of sync with their graduating class, they can’t pretend for long. Parents rarely admit it, so watch for omissions.
They’ll lack milestone internships e.g., on the Hill, California, NYC parents and kids boast about in person and on Facebook and LinkedIn. They don’t go study abroad. You’ll never hear well-defined career or grad school plans; parents will be vague and wishy-washy about how the child is doing. And you won’t see graduation ceremony photos on their Facebook four years after high school.
The young men quietly move back home and/or are working dead-end jobs that are beneath anyone with a BA.