Anonymous wrote:15:21 To posters who do not understand how divorce changes a parent's commitment to cover college, it's one of many, many things divorce can change. This is truly an area that depends on the will of the parent. And yes, the willingness to cover can change over time, due to a number of things. Financial woes, remarriage, a sense of being screwed by the original financial settlement.
Anonymous wrote:Pp, he paid for your freshman year. Did ypu thank him fo that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That is how the system is set up.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nothing, at 18, the kids are adults. It should depend on the child's relationship with the parent (s) and their willingness to pay. Married parents are not required to pay, so divorced should not be either.
So if you don't like your kids the don't get to go to college?
No kid has the money to pay for it themselves and no law can force a parent to provide beyond the 18 years
Everyone's situation is different. My husband and I were wiling to help pay but on certain conditions - a relationship with him (I didn't care about me) - one visit per year we pay for and weekly phone calls, full disclosure of grades and finances and living situation. They said no, just send money. He said no relationship, no money. Sounded reasonable to me. They only call for money or gifts now. When we do send them, never a thank you (we are done as of this year). When my married parents paid for my college they made it clear good grades, they get copies of grades, they have full financial control (they did pay for everything so it was fine with me), visit them holidays/summers and be reasonable about spending. Oh, and pick a major that would lead to a career (i.e. no art). I agreed, followed the "rules and they paid (though some holidays I visited my grandparents instead).
That's weird your kids would only visit once per year. Almost everyone I knew at college would go home for winter break and most people went home for Thanksgiving unless they lived across the country. I fully support payment being conditioned on performance. My parents had minimum grade expectations as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That is how the system is set up.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nothing, at 18, the kids are adults. It should depend on the child's relationship with the parent (s) and their willingness to pay. Married parents are not required to pay, so divorced should not be either.
So if you don't like your kids the don't get to go to college?
No kid has the money to pay for it themselves and no law can force a parent to provide beyond the 18 years
Everyone's situation is different. My husband and I were wiling to help pay but on certain conditions - a relationship with him (I didn't care about me) - one visit per year we pay for and weekly phone calls, full disclosure of grades and finances and living situation. They said no, just send money. He said no relationship, no money. Sounded reasonable to me. They only call for money or gifts now. When we do send them, never a thank you (we are done as of this year). When my married parents paid for my college they made it clear good grades, they get copies of grades, they have full financial control (they did pay for everything so it was fine with me), visit them holidays/summers and be reasonable about spending. Oh, and pick a major that would lead to a career (i.e. no art). I agreed, followed the "rules and they paid (though some holidays I visited my grandparents instead).
Anonymous wrote:That is how the system is set up.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nothing, at 18, the kids are adults. It should depend on the child's relationship with the parent (s) and their willingness to pay. Married parents are not required to pay, so divorced should not be either.
So if you don't like your kids the don't get to go to college?
No kid has the money to pay for it themselves and no law can force a parent to provide beyond the 18 years
Anonymous wrote:11:05 A job loss with a one-earner household, which is what you have if a divorced person does not remarry/repartner, is not the same as job loss in a two-income household. How can this not be clear? Are you divorced? Me senses not.
Anonymous wrote:College is between the child and the parent. A parent is not obligated to pay for college.
Anonymous wrote:15:21 To posters who do not understand how divorce changes a parent's commitment to cover college, it's one of many, many things divorce can change. This is truly an area that depends on the will of the parent. And yes, the willingness to cover can change over time, due to a number of things. Financial woes, remarriage, a sense of being screwed by the original financial settlement.