Anonymous wrote:Kids at SEC schools like Alabama, Georgia, and Tennessee aren't having the problems described in this thread. They're having fun, loving life, tailgating and watching great football. And the academics are much better than they get credit for. Something to think about as your kids, perhaps as your behest, stress themselves out in high school and make themselves miserable to get into an "elite" college where they'll just be even more stressed out and miserable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids at SEC schools like Alabama, Georgia, and Tennessee aren't having the problems described in this thread. They're having fun, loving life, tailgating and watching great football. And the academics are much better than they get credit for. Something to think about as your kids, perhaps as your behest, stress themselves out in high school and make themselves miserable to get into an "elite" college where they'll just be even more stressed out and miserable.
Drop-out rates within 6 years:
Alabama: 28%
Georgia: 12%
UTK: 28%
Penn State: 15%
Pitt: 16%
Umass: 17%
This makes sense to me, because I believe there is a large delta between Georgia and UTK/Alabama.
I won't even list the "high stress" schools because their drop-out rates are at most 5%, and most are just 1%-2%.
You missed the point of the thread. No one said kids aren't passing their classes and graduating at the high-stress schools. Just that they're miserable, many of them not making friends or creating the memories that we so fondly look back on from our college days. Kids don't drop out of Alabama or Tennessee because they're depressed but because they're having TOO much fun. They party and get laid so much that they forget to go to class or study for finals.
No, that's of course not why they drop out. Why are UGA students managing to stay in school? Are you claiming UGA is now a high-stress place?
Are you also saying Penn State is now a high stress place?
UGA students graduate at higher rates than UTK/Bama kids because they were better students to begin with. Check the common data sets. This isn't hard. It still has nothing to do with how happy the students are.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love that everyone answering this thread is literally part of the problem. We, as parents, did this. We are not willing to change it either. God forbid there is an illusion that another kid or group of kids will get a leg up on your kid. Criticize the methods of other parents and the related behaviors without taking any accountability. Declare a handful of schools "worthy" and put down other kids and families who can't or don't want the "top" schools.
Take a look in the mirror, everyone! You're supporting this nonsense, voting for people who support this nonsense, pay obscene amounts of money for it all too. What are you willing to do to stop it? Are you willing to tell your middle school kid that it's ridiculous to travel across the country to play sports? Are you willing to tell your kid that taking 12 APs is too much and you'd like them to get a job, do chores at home, and hang out with siblings instead? Are you willing to forego paid college essay consultants for a less eloquent essay?
I am! I’m absolutely doing all of that. My teens are pretty happy, well-balanced individuals overall. But I am very aware that could change when they get to college.
Be careful assuming that it’s just the high-achieving, helicopter-parented, rat race kids who are unhappy, though. My kids go to a very economically diverse high school, and the kids on the other end of that spectrum are pretty miserable, too. It’s the phones. The culture.
Yes, this was my son. And he went to one of those big rah-rah football schools with a reputation for being friendly. He's never had trouble making friends. He still found connecting socially to be really, really hard. Ended up hanging mostly with a couple HS friends in his first year. Gradually got to make more friends through classes and is very happy with the school now.
He's not a big drinker and didn't want to join a frat. Seems it's easier to make "friends" if you are willing to get drunk with people all weekend. A lot of kids don't seem to be able to socialize without being drunk and/or stoned.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids at SEC schools like Alabama, Georgia, and Tennessee aren't having the problems described in this thread. They're having fun, loving life, tailgating and watching great football. And the academics are much better than they get credit for. Something to think about as your kids, perhaps as your behest, stress themselves out in high school and make themselves miserable to get into an "elite" college where they'll just be even more stressed out and miserable.
Drop-out rates within 6 years:
Alabama: 28%
Georgia: 12%
UTK: 28%
Penn State: 15%
Pitt: 16%
Umass: 17%
This makes sense to me, because I believe there is a large delta between Georgia and UTK/Alabama.
I won't even list the "high stress" schools because their drop-out rates are at most 5%, and most are just 1%-2%.
You missed the point of the thread. No one said kids aren't passing their classes and graduating at the high-stress schools. Just that they're miserable, many of them not making friends or creating the memories that we so fondly look back on from our college days. Kids don't drop out of Alabama or Tennessee because they're depressed but because they're having TOO much fun. They party and get laid so much that they forget to go to class or study for finals.
No, that's of course not why they drop out. Why are UGA students managing to stay in school? Are you claiming UGA is now a high-stress place?
Are you also saying Penn State is now a high stress place?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agree with others. Kids have no resilience. They are helicoptered to perfection. If they don’t get an A, the parents call their teacher (or the principal) and complain so now everyone gets an A. In college, when in theory, they fall apart. In weeder classes (which they are all in because their helicopter parents require them to
Major in CS, engineering or pre-meds types of majors) Cs are not uncommon and they freak out.
People are doing their kids no favors with the intense helicoptering. Let them struggle or fail. Let them figure it out!
The number of freshman parents looking for computer science tutors on the Cornell parents Facebook page is shocking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agree with others. Kids have no resilience. They are helicoptered to perfection. If they don’t get an A, the parents call their teacher (or the principal) and complain so now everyone gets an A. In college, when in theory, they fall apart. In weeder classes (which they are all in because their helicopter parents require them to
Major in CS, engineering or pre-meds types of majors) Cs are not uncommon and they freak out.
People are doing their kids no favors with the intense helicoptering. Let them struggle or fail. Let them figure it out!
The number of freshman parents looking for computer science tutors on the Cornell parents Facebook page is shocking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love that everyone answering this thread is literally part of the problem. We, as parents, did this. We are not willing to change it either. God forbid there is an illusion that another kid or group of kids will get a leg up on your kid. Criticize the methods of other parents and the related behaviors without taking any accountability. Declare a handful of schools "worthy" and put down other kids and families who can't or don't want the "top" schools.
Take a look in the mirror, everyone! You're supporting this nonsense, voting for people who support this nonsense, pay obscene amounts of money for it all too. What are you willing to do to stop it? Are you willing to tell your middle school kid that it's ridiculous to travel across the country to play sports? Are you willing to tell your kid that taking 12 APs is too much and you'd like them to get a job, do chores at home, and hang out with siblings instead? Are you willing to forego paid college essay consultants for a less eloquent essay?
I am! I’m absolutely doing all of that. My teens are pretty happy, well-balanced individuals overall. But I am very aware that could change when they get to college.
Be careful assuming that it’s just the high-achieving, helicopter-parented, rat race kids who are unhappy, though. My kids go to a very economically diverse high school, and the kids on the other end of that spectrum are pretty miserable, too. It’s the phones. The culture.
Yes, this was my son. And he went to one of those big rah-rah football schools with a reputation for being friendly. He's never had trouble making friends. He still found connecting socially to be really, really hard. Ended up hanging mostly with a couple HS friends in his first year. Gradually got to make more friends through classes and is very happy with the school now.
He's not a big drinker and didn't want to join a frat. Seems it's easier to make "friends" if you are willing to get drunk with people all weekend. A lot of kids don't seem to be able to socialize without being drunk and/or stoned.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids at SEC schools like Alabama, Georgia, and Tennessee aren't having the problems described in this thread. They're having fun, loving life, tailgating and watching great football. And the academics are much better than they get credit for. Something to think about as your kids, perhaps as your behest, stress themselves out in high school and make themselves miserable to get into an "elite" college where they'll just be even more stressed out and miserable.
Drop-out rates within 6 years:
Alabama: 28%
Georgia: 12%
UTK: 28%
Penn State: 15%
Pitt: 16%
Umass: 17%
This makes sense to me, because I believe there is a large delta between Georgia and UTK/Alabama.
I won't even list the "high stress" schools because their drop-out rates are at most 5%, and most are just 1%-2%.
You missed the point of the thread. No one said kids aren't passing their classes and graduating at the high-stress schools. Just that they're miserable, many of them not making friends or creating the memories that we so fondly look back on from our college days. Kids don't drop out of Alabama or Tennessee because they're depressed but because they're having TOO much fun. They party and get laid so much that they forget to go to class or study for finals.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids at SEC schools like Alabama, Georgia, and Tennessee aren't having the problems described in this thread. They're having fun, loving life, tailgating and watching great football. And the academics are much better than they get credit for. Something to think about as your kids, perhaps as your behest, stress themselves out in high school and make themselves miserable to get into an "elite" college where they'll just be even more stressed out and miserable.
You can’t generalize like this. My neighbor dropped out of Alabama this past weekend and is now taking a gap year. These are schools of tens of thousands of individuals. They aren’t all at tailgates.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love that everyone answering this thread is literally part of the problem. We, as parents, did this. We are not willing to change it either. God forbid there is an illusion that another kid or group of kids will get a leg up on your kid. Criticize the methods of other parents and the related behaviors without taking any accountability. Declare a handful of schools "worthy" and put down other kids and families who can't or don't want the "top" schools.
Take a look in the mirror, everyone! You're supporting this nonsense, voting for people who support this nonsense, pay obscene amounts of money for it all too. What are you willing to do to stop it? Are you willing to tell your middle school kid that it's ridiculous to travel across the country to play sports? Are you willing to tell your kid that taking 12 APs is too much and you'd like them to get a job, do chores at home, and hang out with siblings instead? Are you willing to forego paid college essay consultants for a less eloquent essay?
I am! I’m absolutely doing all of that. My teens are pretty happy, well-balanced individuals overall. But I am very aware that could change when they get to college.
Be careful assuming that it’s just the high-achieving, helicopter-parented, rat race kids who are unhappy, though. My kids go to a very economically diverse high school, and the kids on the other end of that spectrum are pretty miserable, too. It’s the phones. The culture.
Anonymous wrote:I love that everyone answering this thread is literally part of the problem. We, as parents, did this. We are not willing to change it either. God forbid there is an illusion that another kid or group of kids will get a leg up on your kid. Criticize the methods of other parents and the related behaviors without taking any accountability. Declare a handful of schools "worthy" and put down other kids and families who can't or don't want the "top" schools.
Take a look in the mirror, everyone! You're supporting this nonsense, voting for people who support this nonsense, pay obscene amounts of money for it all too. What are you willing to do to stop it? Are you willing to tell your middle school kid that it's ridiculous to travel across the country to play sports? Are you willing to tell your kid that taking 12 APs is too much and you'd like them to get a job, do chores at home, and hang out with siblings instead? Are you willing to forego paid college essay consultants for a less eloquent essay?