Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would absolutely trust the input of a longtime cop. Especially a cop who was on the force in the same city where she will be traveling to school daily.
OP, why are you balking at his clear, professional opinion on this? Are you worried that DD won't grow up to be independent enough if she doesn't do this on her own? It's not coddling her or denying her independence to say no to this. Instead you will teach her that learning to exercise appropriate caution is as important a life skill as doing everything independently, and heeding the advice of people with experience is the smart thing to do.
So, to your question: No.
Just to clarify DH's over-protectiveness - he had her wear a bike helmet on the subway when she was 0 to 5 years old. He stool outside her preschool for the entire day on her first day of school.
DD really wants to be independent and start her new school on her own. DH will pick her up every late afternoon and ride home with her but I thought that two stops and a couple of blocks would probably be okay.
But DH and all of you are probably right. It is no problem for me to take the subway with her and walk her to school and the go to work.
Anonymous wrote:Yes. I have a 14 yr old and live in San Francisco (am from NY). She was taking the subways here alone at 11. NYC is safer than SF.
Anonymous wrote:I have no clue who is posting "hell no" from DC, because they're dead wrong. I presume they are from the suburbs and they are projecting what they think their answers would be if they lived here, but the reality is, the DC metro and the DC buses are packed in the morning with school kids--public and private. Starting in 5th grade, when she was 10, my daughter has taken the metro to school, camps, etc. by herself. We consider ourselves protective, upper middle class parents, but city living is city living and literally every other parent we know has been doing the same with their kids since 5th grade (when they all start leaving their local elementary schools we could walk to). And she loves the independence. She has a cell phone. We always go with her on her first day--it helps with everyone's nerves and it's a fun tradition.
+1 Gonzaga is a high school, are people that live in the DMV really not letting their high schoolers metro to school by themselves? My kid has been taking metro by himself from SE, DC to his upper NW high school since he started there. I don't know how people that are that overprotective even like living in a metropolitan area.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would absolutely trust the input of a longtime cop. Especially a cop who was on the force in the same city where she will be traveling to school daily.
OP, why are you balking at his clear, professional opinion on this? Are you worried that DD won't grow up to be independent enough if she doesn't do this on her own? It's not coddling her or denying her independence to say no to this. Instead you will teach her that learning to exercise appropriate caution is as important a life skill as doing everything independently, and heeding the advice of people with experience is the smart thing to do.
So, to your question: No.
I disagree, my H is a cop and my kids would never drive, take the metro, go down to the creek, go far away to college, etc if it were up to him.
They see the worst in the world and project it onto their family.
My advice, call the school and ask them their opinion.
While I would not be happy sending my kid "alone" my Gonzaga friends do it all the time because they are not alone, once they get off the stop there are tons of kids to walk with.
I went to school in DC and took the metro bus... alone.
Gonzaga doesn't have middle school. Are you saying you wouldn't let your highschooler ride the metro?