Anonymous wrote:What does a very good school mean to your son? The very top schools don't offer merit aid-- does that mean they are not options? Ron Lieber, The Price You Pay For College, may be a good read. He encourages parents to have frank convos with their kids... it's not about being a tiger mom, but you can be honest about how academic performance can be tied to aid offers, and what your hopes/expectations are. Best of luck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not a Tiger Parent, but do consider As to be expected. My son, who has learning disabilities but is a methodical, hard-working person, had straight As in most of his dozen APs and other courses taking in high school. He had tutors for some subjects, which I consider part of a normal education (my mother and siblings had governesses and tutors at home, why not this generation of kids?).
Please retire the Tiger Parent concept and parent according to your lights and the kid you have.
Really??? Are you from the US? Growing up I never knew anyone with a tutor who didn't have severe academic issues and I only heard about governesses in books.
Not that PP. I think she means nannies. Governesses did indeed go out with Queen Victoria.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the only sane approach is to raise kids who can be happy and successful attending (and after attending) a reasonably wide range of colleges and then emphasize to them that admissions are a crap shoot and that what they do once they are at college matters more than which one of 10 or 15 or 20 they end up going to.
X10000
Well said.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not a Tiger Parent, but do consider As to be expected. My son, who has learning disabilities but is a methodical, hard-working person, had straight As in most of his dozen APs and other courses taking in high school. He had tutors for some subjects, which I consider part of a normal education (my mother and siblings had governesses and tutors at home, why not this generation of kids?).
Please retire the Tiger Parent concept and parent according to your lights and the kid you have.
Really??? Are you from the US? Growing up I never knew anyone with a tutor who didn't have severe academic issues and I only heard about governesses in books.
PP you replied to. I am European and I am indeed talking about a real governess, one who teaches and lives with the family. And my dear PP. Parents who can afford it hire tutors for their kids as early as elementary school, for remedial and enrichment purposes. Today, in the DC area.
I am also European, from London. Your terminology is archaic. There is no one in the whole of Europe who has a governess because they no longer exist. You might have a live-in tutor though.![]()
So you can't read? I said my mother had a governess. And that nowadays, people shouldn't scoff at tutors, which are essentially a continuation of that.
I see several posters have responded to my post and side-tracked the thread. In your (jealous) haste to excoriate someone you perceive to be part of the elite, you're getting sloppy.
Wow not PP but I didn’t get jealousy or putting down of the elite class. You seem to projecting your stuff onto other people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not a Tiger Parent, but do consider As to be expected. My son, who has learning disabilities but is a methodical, hard-working person, had straight As in most of his dozen APs and other courses taking in high school. He had tutors for some subjects, which I consider part of a normal education (my mother and siblings had governesses and tutors at home, why not this generation of kids?).
Please retire the Tiger Parent concept and parent according to your lights and the kid you have.
Really??? Are you from the US? Growing up I never knew anyone with a tutor who didn't have severe academic issues and I only heard about governesses in books.
PP you replied to. I am European and I am indeed talking about a real governess, one who teaches and lives with the family. And my dear PP. Parents who can afford it hire tutors for their kids as early as elementary school, for remedial and enrichment purposes. Today, in the DC area.
I am also European, from London. Your terminology is archaic. There is no one in the whole of Europe who has a governess because they no longer exist. You might have a live-in tutor though.![]()
So you can't read? I said my mother had a governess. And that nowadays, people shouldn't scoff at tutors, which are essentially a continuation of that.
I see several posters have responded to my post and side-tracked the thread. In your (jealous) haste to excoriate someone you perceive to be part of the elite, you're getting sloppy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not a Tiger Parent, but do consider As to be expected. My son, who has learning disabilities but is a methodical, hard-working person, had straight As in most of his dozen APs and other courses taking in high school. He had tutors for some subjects, which I consider part of a normal education (my mother and siblings had governesses and tutors at home, why not this generation of kids?).
Please retire the Tiger Parent concept and parent according to your lights and the kid you have.
Really??? Are you from the US? Growing up I never knew anyone with a tutor who didn't have severe academic issues and I only heard about governesses in books.
PP you replied to. I am European and I am indeed talking about a real governess, one who teaches and lives with the family. And my dear PP. Parents who can afford it hire tutors for their kids as early as elementary school, for remedial and enrichment purposes. Today, in the DC area.
I am also European, from London. Your terminology is archaic. There is no one in the whole of Europe who has a governess because they no longer exist. You might have a live-in tutor though.![]()
So you can't read? I said my mother had a governess. And that nowadays, people shouldn't scoff at tutors, which are essentially a continuation of that.
I see several posters have responded to my post and side-tracked the thread. In your (jealous) haste to excoriate someone you perceive to be part of the elite, you're getting sloppy.
Anonymous wrote:I am not a Tiger Parent, but do consider As to be expected. My son, who has learning disabilities but is a methodical, hard-working person, had straight As in most of his dozen APs and other courses taking in high school. He had tutors for some subjects, which I consider part of a normal education (my mother and siblings had governesses and tutors at home, why not this generation of kids?).
Please retire the Tiger Parent concept and parent according to your lights and the kid you have.
Anonymous wrote:
So while you peruse the responses of more laissez-faire parents, please be aware that now is the time some parents hire a private college consultant. Some parents freak out when their kids are juniors and seniors, but college consultant reserve more spots and more of their interest to shepherding the high school careers of 9th graders. They can tease out student interest, advise on which courses to pick all four years of high school (that's if you hire one for an 8th grader), weigh pros and cons of various extra curriculars for which colleges, suggest a list of colleges tailored to student interest and achievement, and finally edit essays and manage deadlines and stress for the actual application season.
The best ones are very expensive, of course. And sometimes parents look back and wonder whether it was all worth it.
But I'm just telling you that NORMAL parenting runs the gamut between hands-off and hands-on, and it's ALL FINE. It depends on parent and student personalities, and available funds.
Anonymous wrote:I think the only sane approach is to raise kids who can be happy and successful attending (and after attending) a reasonably wide range of colleges and then emphasize to them that admissions are a crap shoot and that what they do once they are at college matters more than which one of 10 or 15 or 20 they end up going to.
Anonymous wrote:What’s a donut hole?