They know. See the "legal loophole" phrase.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone considered a conservatorship to override FERPA and be able to communicate with professors and deans?
If your child is so lacking in competence such that you could convince a judge that conservatorship is necessary, is college the right path?
Who said the child lacks competence? Parents are just looking for ways to be involved and this would be a legal loophole.
That's the standard for a judge granting conservatorship.
Anonymous wrote:Or I could just speak to my child, like a normal parent does.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sorry you were such an incompentent parent that your child needed conservatorship. Mine is living independently, getting good grades, and is currently working a wonderful internship in their field of choice without any helicoptering needed.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like a parenting problem. How about you raise your children properly?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone considered a conservatorship to override FERPA and be able to communicate with professors and deans?
If your child is so lacking in competence such that you could convince a judge that conservatorship is necessary, is college the right path?
Who said the child lacks competence? Parents are just looking for ways to be involved and this would be a legal loophole.
No judge would grant you a conservatorship just because you want to be able to talk to your adult child’s professors. You have to be able to prove a level of physical or mental incapacity that requires a conservator, and show that less restrictive options would not work. A conservatorship restricts the person’s legal rights. Courts don’t do that willy-nilly.
Lots of college kids are not mentally adults yet and could benefit from this. The courts would agree.
The parenting problem is not taking action on your kid’s behalf. Sorry you were not smart enough to get a conservatorship.
With a conservatorship you could actually verify this.
Or I could just speak to my child, like a normal parent does.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sorry you were such an incompentent parent that your child needed conservatorship. Mine is living independently, getting good grades, and is currently working a wonderful internship in their field of choice without any helicoptering needed.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like a parenting problem. How about you raise your children properly?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone considered a conservatorship to override FERPA and be able to communicate with professors and deans?
If your child is so lacking in competence such that you could convince a judge that conservatorship is necessary, is college the right path?
Who said the child lacks competence? Parents are just looking for ways to be involved and this would be a legal loophole.
No judge would grant you a conservatorship just because you want to be able to talk to your adult child’s professors. You have to be able to prove a level of physical or mental incapacity that requires a conservator, and show that less restrictive options would not work. A conservatorship restricts the person’s legal rights. Courts don’t do that willy-nilly.
Lots of college kids are not mentally adults yet and could benefit from this. The courts would agree.
The parenting problem is not taking action on your kid’s behalf. Sorry you were not smart enough to get a conservatorship.
With a conservatorship you could actually verify this.
Anonymous wrote:Sorry you were such an incompentent parent that your child needed conservatorship. Mine is living independently, getting good grades, and is currently working a wonderful internship in their field of choice without any helicoptering needed.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like a parenting problem. How about you raise your children properly?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone considered a conservatorship to override FERPA and be able to communicate with professors and deans?
If your child is so lacking in competence such that you could convince a judge that conservatorship is necessary, is college the right path?
Who said the child lacks competence? Parents are just looking for ways to be involved and this would be a legal loophole.
No judge would grant you a conservatorship just because you want to be able to talk to your adult child’s professors. You have to be able to prove a level of physical or mental incapacity that requires a conservator, and show that less restrictive options would not work. A conservatorship restricts the person’s legal rights. Courts don’t do that willy-nilly.
Lots of college kids are not mentally adults yet and could benefit from this. The courts would agree.
The parenting problem is not taking action on your kid’s behalf. Sorry you were not smart enough to get a conservatorship.
Anonymous wrote:I have access to the bills and that’s it. Never crossed my mind to ask for more. Kids are independent, work hard, and do well. They share grades with me, but I don’t ask. At some point they need to fly on their own.
Sorry you were such an incompentent parent that your child needed conservatorship. Mine is living independently, getting good grades, and is currently working a wonderful internship in their field of choice without any helicoptering needed.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like a parenting problem. How about you raise your children properly?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone considered a conservatorship to override FERPA and be able to communicate with professors and deans?
If your child is so lacking in competence such that you could convince a judge that conservatorship is necessary, is college the right path?
Who said the child lacks competence? Parents are just looking for ways to be involved and this would be a legal loophole.
No judge would grant you a conservatorship just because you want to be able to talk to your adult child’s professors. You have to be able to prove a level of physical or mental incapacity that requires a conservator, and show that less restrictive options would not work. A conservatorship restricts the person’s legal rights. Courts don’t do that willy-nilly.
Lots of college kids are not mentally adults yet and could benefit from this. The courts would agree.
The parenting problem is not taking action on your kid’s behalf. Sorry you were not smart enough to get a conservatorship.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone considered a conservatorship to override FERPA and be able to communicate with professors and deans?
If your child is so lacking in competence such that you could convince a judge that conservatorship is necessary, is college the right path?
Who said the child lacks competence? Parents are just looking for ways to be involved and this would be a legal loophole.
No judge would grant you a conservatorship just because you want to be able to talk to your adult child’s professors. You have to be able to prove a level of physical or mental incapacity that requires a conservator, and show that less restrictive options would not work. A conservatorship restricts the person’s legal rights. Courts don’t do that willy-nilly.
Lots of college kids are not mentally adults yet and could benefit from this. The courts would agree.
No they wouldn't. I represent families seeking guardianship for their disabled young adults, and the bar is much higher than teens making immature, age appropriate decisions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone considered a conservatorship to override FERPA and be able to communicate with professors and deans?
If your child is so lacking in competence such that you could convince a judge that conservatorship is necessary, is college the right path?
Who said the child lacks competence? Parents are just looking for ways to be involved and this would be a legal loophole.
No judge would grant you a conservatorship just because you want to be able to talk to your adult child’s professors. You have to be able to prove a level of physical or mental incapacity that requires a conservator, and show that less restrictive options would not work. A conservatorship restricts the person’s legal rights. Courts don’t do that willy-nilly.
Lots of college kids are not mentally adults yet and could benefit from this. The courts would agree.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like a parenting problem. How about you raise your children properly?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone considered a conservatorship to override FERPA and be able to communicate with professors and deans?
If your child is so lacking in competence such that you could convince a judge that conservatorship is necessary, is college the right path?
Who said the child lacks competence? Parents are just looking for ways to be involved and this would be a legal loophole.
No judge would grant you a conservatorship just because you want to be able to talk to your adult child’s professors. You have to be able to prove a level of physical or mental incapacity that requires a conservator, and show that less restrictive options would not work. A conservatorship restricts the person’s legal rights. Courts don’t do that willy-nilly.
Lots of college kids are not mentally adults yet and could benefit from this. The courts would agree.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My parents were overbearing when I was in high school and I refused to share my grades with my parents in college. My mother still brings it up to this day how she thought that was wrong that she didn’t have access to it.
FWIW, I would never force my 18 year old to sign FERPA or HIPAA waivers. I want my kid to be able to do what she needs to do and hopefully have a trusting enough relationship that she’ll talk with me. I had to go to planned parenthood after an unfortunate sexual encounter when I was in college to get tested for STIs. There’s no way my mom needed to know about that especially because everything was fine.
I can’t with the helicoptering on this forum
Is it helicoptering when your kid has a serious mental illness and may not be able to make their own decisions?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone considered a conservatorship to override FERPA and be able to communicate with professors and deans?
If your child is so lacking in competence such that you could convince a judge that conservatorship is necessary, is college the right path?
Who said the child lacks competence? Parents are just looking for ways to be involved and this would be a legal loophole.
No judge would grant you a conservatorship just because you want to be able to talk to your adult child’s professors. You have to be able to prove a level of physical or mental incapacity that requires a conservator, and show that less restrictive options would not work. A conservatorship restricts the person’s legal rights. Courts don’t do that willy-nilly.
Lots of college kids are not mentally adults yet and could benefit from this. The courts would agree.
Sounds like a parenting problem. How about you raise your children properly?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone considered a conservatorship to override FERPA and be able to communicate with professors and deans?
If your child is so lacking in competence such that you could convince a judge that conservatorship is necessary, is college the right path?
Who said the child lacks competence? Parents are just looking for ways to be involved and this would be a legal loophole.
No judge would grant you a conservatorship just because you want to be able to talk to your adult child’s professors. You have to be able to prove a level of physical or mental incapacity that requires a conservator, and show that less restrictive options would not work. A conservatorship restricts the person’s legal rights. Courts don’t do that willy-nilly.
Lots of college kids are not mentally adults yet and could benefit from this. The courts would agree.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone considered a conservatorship to override FERPA and be able to communicate with professors and deans?
If your child is so lacking in competence such that you could convince a judge that conservatorship is necessary, is college the right path?
Who said the child lacks competence? Parents are just looking for ways to be involved and this would be a legal loophole.
No judge would grant you a conservatorship just because you want to be able to talk to your adult child’s professors. You have to be able to prove a level of physical or mental incapacity that requires a conservator, and show that less restrictive options would not work. A conservatorship restricts the person’s legal rights. Courts don’t do that willy-nilly.
Anonymous wrote:My parents were overbearing when I was in high school and I refused to share my grades with my parents in college. My mother still brings it up to this day how she thought that was wrong that she didn’t have access to it.
FWIW, I would never force my 18 year old to sign FERPA or HIPAA waivers. I want my kid to be able to do what she needs to do and hopefully have a trusting enough relationship that she’ll talk with me. I had to go to planned parenthood after an unfortunate sexual encounter when I was in college to get tested for STIs. There’s no way my mom needed to know about that especially because everything was fine.
I can’t with the helicoptering on this forum
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone considered a conservatorship to override FERPA and be able to communicate with professors and deans?
If your child is so lacking in competence such that you could convince a judge that conservatorship is necessary, is college the right path?
Who said the child lacks competence? Parents are just looking for ways to be involved and this would be a legal loophole.