Anonymous wrote:I mean, any of us with more than one kid face this to a certain degree. My DS has always gotten lower grades and scores than his younger sister. DD will have a shot at colleges that DS had no chance of getting into. They're just different people and will have different outcomes, and I think most kids understand this. I feel like the more the parent agonizes over this, the bigger of a deal the kids sense it is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also have twins going through this process, with a much bigger divergence in terms of academic strength. One only applied to, and has been admitted to, a small college in FL specifically for kids with learning disabilities, while her sister has applied to a range of 10 more typical options, mostly in-state in VA. There is huge amount of FOMO happening with DD1 as the acceptances continue to roll in for DD2. Fearing things will get worse as we get into Admitted Students Days season, as I already have 2 overnight trips planned for DD2, and probably will do at least 2 more, while DD1 will just have the one trip. Trying my best to reassure her that this school is a great fit for her, and to get her to focus on that rather than what is going on with her sister, but it is certainly a challenge. Lots of love and support is the only advice I can give. Hang in there, it will all be good at the end of the day!!!
PP, not to hijack but can you please share the name of the small school in FL for kids with disabilities?
Anonymous wrote:I have g/g twins in HS who just took PSAT. Same twin who got a great score is also in varsity sport and has a profile, and one is not, plays Rec only. One twin is getting lots of mail from colleges, the other nothing.
Hard to watch.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have boy girl twins. They are close friends, but very different people. To our surprise, they ended up applying to almost all the same schools. We tried to guide and encourage them to find different schools, but they ended up with many of the same.
One of the kids is quite a bit stronger academically than the other, and also has a great Extracurricular with success on the national level. The schools they applied were a reasonable target/reach for the less strong twin, and a straight target/safety for the strong one but everything these days feels like a crapshoot.
We are obviously concerned as all ea decisions start coming in this week and rd in the next few months, the twin who is a fantastic kid but less strong academically and in terms of extracurricular will possibly get shut out.
Luckily, both twins are into safeties, so we are trying to really talk about how awesome those schools are.
Any advice on how to handle this situation when one twin gets into a school and the other doesn’t. We generally think handling disappointment is their issue and try to shrug and not make it a big deal but this is an added layer of complication with twin dynamics.
( if we’re honest, the twin who is stronger on paper worked harder and was more driven but it doesn’t feel great to point that out in a moment of disappointment so if there’s something we can say that is kind and more constructive we’d like to do that!)
Thanks in advance.
This seems like the making of a great sit com. Can the smart twin accept two offers and have the other twin attend in their place? Maybe they have to switch at winter break and hilarity ensues?
OP said boy girl twins so unfortunately that couldn't happen.
Anonymous wrote:Look, one twin worked harder. If she gets into better schools, it’s a good lesson to the other twin that hard work can pay off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also have twins going through this process, with a much bigger divergence in terms of academic strength. One only applied to, and has been admitted to, a small college in FL specifically for kids with learning disabilities, while her sister has applied to a range of 10 more typical options, mostly in-state in VA. There is huge amount of FOMO happening with DD1 as the acceptances continue to roll in for DD2. Fearing things will get worse as we get into Admitted Students Days season, as I already have 2 overnight trips planned for DD2, and probably will do at least 2 more, while DD1 will just have the one trip. Trying my best to reassure her that this school is a great fit for her, and to get her to focus on that rather than what is going on with her sister, but it is certainly a challenge. Lots of love and support is the only advice I can give. Hang in there, it will all be good at the end of the day!!!
I assume you're talking about Lynn in Boca Raton. As a current South Florida resident, I would just tell you to be careful with this one. The school may cater to students with learning disabilities, but its reputation is terrible in the region. I would even say it's a punchline. People call it "Lynndergarten." I can't imagine it is viewed any better in other parts of the country (assuming people have heard of it at all). I'm not telling you this to be disparaging or to discourage you but to encourage you and your daughter to explore other options before settling for Lynn just because she's LD. There are plenty of more reputable colleges that are known for supporting students with special needs. St. Joe's in Philly comes to mind. Really any Jesuit school. I've heard Elon is good, too. Just something to consider.
Hey, don't know much about Lynn, her school is Beacon College in Leesburg. I'm sure it might have a bit of the same type of rep, but it's a good ft for her, so thankful!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How is everybody having twins these days? Fertility treatments?
Look, OP, the kids know each other’s academic records etc and know that one is stronger than the other. That they’re siblings instead of just friends or classmates doesn’t matter. It shouldn’t surprise either of them or anyone else if their admissions results are different, and unless you raised them wrong, they shouldn’t take the different results as any kind of indicator of the merits of either one of them as your children or as human beings. They’ll get over it. End of story.
LOL... I'm PP with the 18 year old G/G twins and haven't encountered this "fertility treatment" snark in a really long time. Thanks for the blast from the past!
Maybe you think it shouldn't matter, or that they are just like any set of friends or classmates, but, in real life, that's not how it plays out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also have twins going through this process, with a much bigger divergence in terms of academic strength. One only applied to, and has been admitted to, a small college in FL specifically for kids with learning disabilities, while her sister has applied to a range of 10 more typical options, mostly in-state in VA. There is huge amount of FOMO happening with DD1 as the acceptances continue to roll in for DD2. Fearing things will get worse as we get into Admitted Students Days season, as I already have 2 overnight trips planned for DD2, and probably will do at least 2 more, while DD1 will just have the one trip. Trying my best to reassure her that this school is a great fit for her, and to get her to focus on that rather than what is going on with her sister, but it is certainly a challenge. Lots of love and support is the only advice I can give. Hang in there, it will all be good at the end of the day!!!
I assume you're talking about Lynn in Boca Raton. As a current South Florida resident, I would just tell you to be careful with this one. The school may cater to students with learning disabilities, but its reputation is terrible in the region. I would even say it's a punchline. People call it "Lynndergarten." I can't imagine it is viewed any better in other parts of the country (assuming people have heard of it at all). I'm not telling you this to be disparaging or to discourage you but to encourage you and your daughter to explore other options before settling for Lynn just because she's LD. There are plenty of more reputable colleges that are known for supporting students with special needs. St. Joe's in Philly comes to mind. Really any Jesuit school. I've heard Elon is good, too. Just something to consider.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also have twins going through this process, with a much bigger divergence in terms of academic strength. One only applied to, and has been admitted to, a small college in FL specifically for kids with learning disabilities, while her sister has applied to a range of 10 more typical options, mostly in-state in VA. There is huge amount of FOMO happening with DD1 as the acceptances continue to roll in for DD2. Fearing things will get worse as we get into Admitted Students Days season, as I already have 2 overnight trips planned for DD2, and probably will do at least 2 more, while DD1 will just have the one trip. Trying my best to reassure her that this school is a great fit for her, and to get her to focus on that rather than what is going on with her sister, but it is certainly a challenge. Lots of love and support is the only advice I can give. Hang in there, it will all be good at the end of the day!!!
PP, not to hijack but can you please share the name of the small school in FL for kids with disabilities?