Anonymous wrote:This is inequitable. Think about the children who drop out, can’t afford college or choose a trade school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This seems weirdly braggy. No one cares where you kid goes to school except your family. Ditto bumper stickers.
Celebrations are not braggy, but it is OK to be proud of your kid for going to college.
Sure, but why are you trying to involve the whole world in it? That's the braggy part. Take your kid to dinner, have a little party. But when you advertise it to the world, you're straight up bragging.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This seems weirdly braggy. No one cares where you kid goes to school except your family. Ditto bumper stickers.
Celebrations are not braggy, but it is OK to be proud of your kid for going to college.
Anonymous wrote:Not our style to display it in the front yard, but I imagine they go over big in the midwestern state where the college is located.
Wondering if this is a common thing to receive? I don't think I've noticed any such signs in our neighborhood, but not a lot of similarly aged kids around here either.
Anonymous wrote:This seems weirdly braggy. No one cares where you kid goes to school except your family. Ditto bumper stickers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Weird flex to be too cool for the school your kid is going to attend (not pike those flyover nerds he'll be attending with!), but: congrats?
Thought the same thing. Learned about school spirit much?
NP, and I would never say never about this stuff (one of my kids struggled for a while in elementary school, and when he got an honor student decal in middle school, he wanted me to put it on my car, which I did), but why would strangers care where my kid goes to college? I'll tell the neighbors I chat with, because I'm sure it will come up.
Anonymous wrote:Weird flex to be too cool for the school your kid is going to attend (not pike those flyover nerds he'll be attending with!), but: congrats?