Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:the December 10th ACT.
- Wednesday he watched basketball games, netflix, goofed on his phone all night.
- Thursday watched NFL and managed his fantasy football team all day.
- Thursday at dinner he and his parents talked about how excited they are about college. Hope he can do well on ACT to earn merit scholarships.
- After dinner, back to football, fantasy football, college basketball.
- So far today shopping, netflix, sports, goofing on phone.
ACT prep books collecting dust in the kitchen. I no longer feel sorry for families who can't afford college.
So based on one child's behavior over Thanksgiving, you have lost sympathy for every family everywhere who can't afford college?
Correct. I looked up merit awards at low tier colleges and they're ridiculously easy to secure. That's before even all the outside scholarships kids can apply for with just some volunteering and a short essay, if that. Easier to sit on your ass like a slob and bitch about how things ain't fair, how the immigrants took all your scholarships.
My kid didn't study for these tests and was a National Merit Finalist and earned a National Merit scholarship. He has a full ride merit scholarship for four years at a top ten STEM university.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:the December 10th ACT.
- Wednesday he watched basketball games, netflix, goofed on his phone all night.
- Thursday watched NFL and managed his fantasy football team all day.
- Thursday at dinner he and his parents talked about how excited they are about college. Hope he can do well on ACT to earn merit scholarships.
- After dinner, back to football, fantasy football, college basketball.
- So far today shopping, netflix, sports, goofing on phone.
ACT prep books collecting dust in the kitchen. I no longer feel sorry for families who can't afford college.
So based on one child's behavior over Thanksgiving, you have lost sympathy for every family everywhere who can't afford college?
Correct. I looked up merit awards at low tier colleges and they're ridiculously easy to secure. That's before even all the outside scholarships kids can apply for with just some volunteering and a short essay, if that. Easier to sit on your ass like a slob and bitch about how things ain't fair, how the immigrants took all your scholarships.
My kid didn't study for these tests and was a National Merit Finalist and earned a National Merit scholarship. He has a full ride merit scholarship for four years at a top ten STEM university.
Please share his stats.
1550/1600, TJ grad, involved very deeply year round in sports and a music group. Didn't need to study for standardized tests. Some people just do well without prep books and such.
What will be on your relative's college applications? Activities, interests?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a weird post. He's supposed to be studying for the December 10th ACT on Thanksgiving?
Studying...working on essays...common app...volunteering...reading. Something. Anything. They're flat broke and the kid is a lazy sack of shit acting like the tuition money is going to fall from the sky.
He's a HS senior. How many times has he taken this test before? Maybe he has already done a prep class and maybe he has already read the ACT prep books.
Maybe he already has decent scores and is going in there rested and confident to see if he can do a little better on the retake.
Leave the kid alone. Seriously. It's possible that he is well aware of the financial situation and he's got community college in mind for the time being - so not feeling the pressure.
They made it my business talking about their finances and junior's big college dreams the last two days.
In-laws: "We hope he does good enough for some of them big scholarships!"
Me: "Are you studying?"
Kid: "Well...uh...I mean yeah."
Anonymous wrote:the December 10th ACT.
- Wednesday he watched basketball games, netflix, goofed on his phone all night.
- Thursday watched NFL and managed his fantasy football team all day.
- Thursday at dinner he and his parents talked about how excited they are about college. Hope he can do well on ACT to earn merit scholarships.
- After dinner, back to football, fantasy football, college basketball.
- So far today shopping, netflix, sports, goofing on phone.
ACT prep books collecting dust in the kitchen. I no longer feel sorry for families who can't afford college.
Anonymous wrote:Your life sounds miserable. Change it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:the December 10th ACT.
- Wednesday he watched basketball games, netflix, goofed on his phone all night.
- Thursday watched NFL and managed his fantasy football team all day.
- Thursday at dinner he and his parents talked about how excited they are about college. Hope he can do well on ACT to earn merit scholarships.
- After dinner, back to football, fantasy football, college basketball.
- So far today shopping, netflix, sports, goofing on phone.
ACT prep books collecting dust in the kitchen. I no longer feel sorry for families who can't afford college.
So based on one child's behavior over Thanksgiving, you have lost sympathy for every family everywhere who can't afford college?
Correct. I looked up merit awards at low tier colleges and they're ridiculously easy to secure. That's before even all the outside scholarships kids can apply for with just some volunteering and a short essay, if that. Easier to sit on your ass like a slob and bitch about how things ain't fair, how the immigrants took all your scholarships.
My kid didn't study for these tests and was a National Merit Finalist and earned a National Merit scholarship. He has a full ride merit scholarship for four years at a top ten STEM university.
Please share his stats.
Anonymous wrote:I was a social worker for two years out of college. My dad told me don't bother, you can't help those people. I called him an angry cynic.
Long story short he was right. Trash are trash. They pass their IQ and their dysfunctions onto the kids before the kids even enter kindergarden.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:the December 10th ACT.
- Wednesday he watched basketball games, netflix, goofed on his phone all night.
- Thursday watched NFL and managed his fantasy football team all day.
- Thursday at dinner he and his parents talked about how excited they are about college. Hope he can do well on ACT to earn merit scholarships.
- After dinner, back to football, fantasy football, college basketball.
- So far today shopping, netflix, sports, goofing on phone.
ACT prep books collecting dust in the kitchen. I no longer feel sorry for families who can't afford college.
are your in-laws white proles? are your mother-in-law and father-in-law white proles as well? if so, your dh (or dw) could be an outlier and that your kid(s) could revert to your in-laws 'mean'.
![]()
always screen the family before you decide to have children!
WTH are you talking about?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:the December 10th ACT.
- Wednesday he watched basketball games, netflix, goofed on his phone all night.
- Thursday watched NFL and managed his fantasy football team all day.
- Thursday at dinner he and his parents talked about how excited they are about college. Hope he can do well on ACT to earn merit scholarships.
- After dinner, back to football, fantasy football, college basketball.
- So far today shopping, netflix, sports, goofing on phone.
ACT prep books collecting dust in the kitchen. I no longer feel sorry for families who can't afford college.
are your in-laws white proles? are your mother-in-law and father-in-law white proles as well? if so, your dh (or dw) could be an outlier and that your kid(s) could revert to your in-laws 'mean'.
![]()
always screen the family before you decide to have children!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a weird post. He's supposed to be studying for the December 10th ACT on Thanksgiving?
Studying...working on essays...common app...volunteering...reading. Something. Anything. They're flat broke and the kid is a lazy sack of shit acting like the tuition money is going to fall from the sky.
He's a HS senior. How many times has he taken this test before? Maybe he has already done a prep class and maybe he has already read the ACT prep books.
Maybe he already has decent scores and is going in there rested and confident to see if he can do a little better on the retake.
Leave the kid alone. Seriously. It's possible that he is well aware of the financial situation and he's got community college in mind for the time being - so not feeling the pressure.
They made it my business talking about their finances and junior's big college dreams the last two days.
In-laws: "We hope he does good enough for some of them big scholarships!"
Me: "Are you studying?"
Kid: "Well...uh...I mean yeah."
Anonymous wrote:the December 10th ACT.
- Wednesday he watched basketball games, netflix, goofed on his phone all night.
- Thursday watched NFL and managed his fantasy football team all day.
- Thursday at dinner he and his parents talked about how excited they are about college. Hope he can do well on ACT to earn merit scholarships.
- After dinner, back to football, fantasy football, college basketball.
- So far today shopping, netflix, sports, goofing on phone.
ACT prep books collecting dust in the kitchen. I no longer feel sorry for families who can't afford college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a weird post. He's supposed to be studying for the December 10th ACT on Thanksgiving?
Studying...working on essays...common app...volunteering...reading. Something. Anything. They're flat broke and the kid is a lazy sack of shit acting like the tuition money is going to fall from the sky.
He's a HS senior. How many times has he taken this test before? Maybe he has already done a prep class and maybe he has already read the ACT prep books.
Maybe he already has decent scores and is going in there rested and confident to see if he can do a little better on the retake.
Leave the kid alone. Seriously. It's possible that he is well aware of the financial situation and he's got community college in mind for the time being - so not feeling the pressure.