Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can't be serious. That's the tour guide equivalent of cocktail party question. Where do you live/work. Good lord.
+1
I will continue to ask. If the tour guide is too sensitive about their personal experiences at the school, they need a different role.
How many tours do you go on and why are you obsessed with knowing? Especially now that it exposes you as an obnoxious boor?
We've been on 6 tours. I'm interested in how articulate the students are because it says something about their ability to navigate social situations, which is an important life skill. If your kid can't handle it and they are a senior, then it's not the right fit for my child/family. That's information I need to have. I agree it's the equivalent of the cocktail party question 'where do you live/work'.
Good, I hope you don't get the answer you're looking for so that you self select out. On a recent tour we got a pamphlet where the graduating class of 2023 matriculated and we found that very helpful information. No need to harass the tour guide there were plenty of other questions to ask that actually mattered.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I honestly donât get the people who insist they have the right to demand information out of every person they meet. Itâs so crazy and rude and entitled.
No one is demanding anything.
Also, a wonderful skill for any young person to learn: how to politely avoid a question they donât want to answer. If for whatever reason they donât want to share.
I expect people to ask my junior next year, and will give him tools to handle it without it being a big deal.
Anonymous wrote:The punch line is that I donât see the question as a personal one. Itâs not âwhat disease is your mom struggling withâ or âhow is you father doing since being laid off.â
Itâs amusing. If someone goes to a mediocre school and is asked later where they went, will they freak out? Will they declare it to be a violation of their safe space? Good luck with the whole employment thing.
Anonymous wrote:Iâm not interested in reading through 14 pages of responses. What I will say is that I generally agree it is inappropriate and rude. When someone asked my DD last year, she would just give a response like Iâm looking at a range of schools.
But, in this case people touring private schools want to know what kind of colleges its seniors are looking at. Itâs perfectly legitimate when looking at private schools to investigate where the graduates go to college. And the tour guide is a logical person to try and get this information from.
If your kid isnât comfortable answering have him come up with a canned response.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just because someone might provide a canned response doesnât mean the question was inappropriate. It just means the person might have their own reasons for not answering which most likely has nothing to do with the one asking the question. It doesnât turn an otherwise normal, appropriate question into a rude one.
This!
Keep telling yourself that. If it was appropriate, they would answer.
Oh please. If I just lost my job and someone asked me what I do for a living, Iâm not going to want to answer the question. Thatâs my issue. Not theirs. Itâs a perfectly appropriate question. Come on.
Anonymous wrote:Iâm not interested in reading through 14 pages of responses. What I will say is that I generally agree it is inappropriate and rude. When someone asked my DD last year, she would just give a response like Iâm looking at a range of schools.
But, in this case people touring private schools want to know what kind of colleges its seniors are looking at. Itâs perfectly legitimate when looking at private schools to investigate where the graduates go to college. And the tour guide is a logical person to try and get this information from.
If your kid isnât comfortable answering have him come up with a canned response.
Anonymous wrote:Well, I view âhowâs the college process goingâ much closer to âwhat do you do for a livingâ than âwhat salary do you earn.â
Only on this board where parents view their own self-worth and value vicariously through their kidsâ private school and college selections is this a deeply personal question. Pro tip: if you want a handbag, buy one. But donât live through your kids.
Let me ask the sensitive folks, if your friends ask where your kids are applying, is it equally outrageous?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just because someone might provide a canned response doesnât mean the question was inappropriate. It just means the person might have their own reasons for not answering which most likely has nothing to do with the one asking the question. It doesnât turn an otherwise normal, appropriate question into a rude one.
This!
Keep telling yourself that. If it was appropriate, they would answer.
Oh please. If I just lost my job and someone asked me what I do for a living, Iâm not going to want to answer the question. Thatâs my issue. Not theirs. Itâs a perfectly appropriate question. Come on.
You know best. Schools are advising prospective parents not to ask. but again, you know best.
No doubt the request is being made by parents of the tour guides who are triggered by someone asking their high school senior what college they are applying to! Must protect little snowflake from any situation that might be uncomfortable for them!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just because someone might provide a canned response doesnât mean the question was inappropriate. It just means the person might have their own reasons for not answering which most likely has nothing to do with the one asking the question. It doesnât turn an otherwise normal, appropriate question into a rude one.
This!
Keep telling yourself that. If it was appropriate, they would answer.
Oh please. If I just lost my job and someone asked me what I do for a living, Iâm not going to want to answer the question. Thatâs my issue. Not theirs. Itâs a perfectly appropriate question. Come on.
You know best. Schools are advising prospective parents not to ask. but again, you know best.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just because someone might provide a canned response doesnât mean the question was inappropriate. It just means the person might have their own reasons for not answering which most likely has nothing to do with the one asking the question. It doesnât turn an otherwise normal, appropriate question into a rude one.
This!
Keep telling yourself that. If it was appropriate, they would answer.
Oh please. If I just lost my job and someone asked me what I do for a living, Iâm not going to want to answer the question. Thatâs my issue. Not theirs. Itâs a perfectly appropriate question. Come on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just because someone might provide a canned response doesnât mean the question was inappropriate. It just means the person might have their own reasons for not answering which most likely has nothing to do with the one asking the question. It doesnât turn an otherwise normal, appropriate question into a rude one.
This!
Keep telling yourself that. If it was appropriate, they would answer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just because someone might provide a canned response doesnât mean the question was inappropriate. It just means the person might have their own reasons for not answering which most likely has nothing to do with the one asking the question. It doesnât turn an otherwise normal, appropriate question into a rude one.
This!