Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. I don’t read my emails either!
Not even if you were waiting for an acceptance to a program you dearly wanted to attend, knowing the acceptance would come by email?
Anonymous wrote:One of the college admissions books I read actually suggested setting up a separate email that student AND parents access to use for all the college stuff, keeping it separate from the student’s personal email and making sure important things don’t fall through the cracks. DC is only a rising sophomore but we’ll likely take this advice when we start actively signing up for information.
Anonymous wrote:NP. I don’t read my emails either!
Anonymous wrote:I 1000% see this happening to me. My kids (junior twins) juggle about 100 balls at once but they stink at checking emails. They have never turned in an assignment late (private school) but they can't manage to register for the SAT on time.
Anonymous wrote:Kids don’t check email, it’s a huge thing. It’s not just your son, op.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One of the college admissions books I read actually suggested setting up a separate email that student AND parents access to use for all the college stuff, keeping it separate from the student’s personal email and making sure important things don’t fall through the cracks. DC is only a rising sophomore but we’ll likely take this advice when we start actively signing up for information.
It’s s good idea but hard to do in practice. You need to sign up for the PSAT (and any other standardized test) using it, and at my son’s school they register you using your school address, which is then deluged.
That is actually a great idea. Do you put this email on college applications and everything college related? Then just edit the email contact at some point toward the end of high school when accepted?