Anonymous wrote:We would 100% have veto power if there were a huge price difference.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is wild to me. We 100% had very open discussions with our kids about school choices and pros and cons. Part of growing up is hearing opinions that may be different than yours, processing the information, and then still making your own decision.
"This is wild to me" - growing up is realizing people may do things differently than the way you do things.
No, the wild part is that people are afraid to share their opinion or talk to their kids openly. I can't say anything at all or voice my opinion for fear that my kid will resent me???
Anonymous wrote:Hi-
My DD is torn between two schools for an ED choice. Yes, she could put off this decision and just RD but much less likely to get in to them RD (bc ED boost is real for both schools).
The two schools are quite different and I can understand her pros and cons to
Each and why she is drawn to these two.
My husband and I have been supportive of this difficult decision and have not offered our opinion between the two bc we want her to own the decision and not feel like we tipped the scale (and god forbid are blamed should It not feel like the right fit!)
What are you all doing as far as sharing opinions or preferences or noting extra down-sides to one school...?? Please LMK what your experience has been or
Any advice here?
Thank you so much in advance!!!
Anonymous wrote:I didn't ever say, "I think you should do this" or "I think you would be happier" etc. No "I think you.." opinions.
I did say, these are both great schools. My pros for Fancy U are the really tight community, I loved that dining hall, we know Peter is happy there, the career placement center was the best we saw, the residential system is my ideal, and there history faculty is top. My cons are the price wouldn't leave you with anything for grad school, travel back and forth will always be a pain, I dont know that it has as many alumni back in this area, if this is where you want to end up.
For Hudson U, the pros are Hogwarts buildings, which I love. The food is plenty good enough. Singles housing, which you liked. Tons of school spirit - very rah rah. Off campus housing junior and senior year at a reasonable price, great price with money left over for grad school. Cons are their history department is a little thinner, student-athlete divide is a concern, and all these reports of murders.
I mean, I think you know which one I like but I'm not SAYING which one I think she should ED to .
Anonymous wrote:At this point I'd say, do you want my opinion? And then if she does, give it. If that helps her clarify she wants the other one, that's fine.
I also remind my kids that when two options are equally compelling it's usually because there's no bad choice. Just pick.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We made a chart with the schools and what DC wanted in a college. They then gave each school a ranking from 1-5 in each category. It didn't really matter what the final score was, it was more to get DC thinking about what they thought was important and making the decision on their own. Of course DH and I were there to guide and answer questions, but it was their decision in the end
We did something similar. DC had a list of all options and gave ratings for each category that they felt was part of the decision making process. Each one was given a weighting, as well. For example, strength of major had a factor of 2, but housing had a factor of 1. It helped DC determine what was and wasn't as important when deciding between their top schools.
Anonymous wrote:We made a chart with the schools and what DC wanted in a college. They then gave each school a ranking from 1-5 in each category. It didn't really matter what the final score was, it was more to get DC thinking about what they thought was important and making the decision on their own. Of course DH and I were there to guide and answer questions, but it was their decision in the end