Anonymous wrote:Wait for the semester. Actually, I wait for DC to tell me, and that’s when she does.
Midterm grades usually represent less than 1/2 the work reflected in the final and are never computed by the prof. So not reliable/meaningful.
Anonymous wrote:Or do you wait for end of the semester over December holiday break?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I am paying for it - F yeah.
I watched my nephew drop out and my sister was clueless the entire year letting him be on his own. 45K down the drain and he is back at home going to community college. This was a straight A student in high school.
That's shocking. What were nephew's ACT/SAT score & AP exam scores? A grades are a dime a dozen; inflated grades bamboozle a lot of parents.
Stop. Lots of kids do poorly the first year for a variety of reasons: depression, being overwhelmed, being sway from home, different learning curve. SAT scores do not indicate what students will be able to handle the pressures off college.
Sister could have been clueless or not, and nephew still could have failed out.
SAT tells a clearer picture about a kid’s college readiness. Grades are bull.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I am paying for it - F yeah.
I watched my nephew drop out and my sister was clueless the entire year letting him be on his own. 45K down the drain and he is back at home going to community college. This was a straight A student in high school.
That's shocking. What were nephew's ACT/SAT score & AP exam scores? A grades are a dime a dozen; inflated grades bamboozle a lot of parents.
Stop. Lots of kids do poorly the first year for a variety of reasons: depression, being overwhelmed, being sway from home, different learning curve. SAT scores do not indicate what students will be able to handle the pressures off college.
Sister could have been clueless or not, and nephew still could have failed out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I am paying for it - F yeah.
I watched my nephew drop out and my sister was clueless the entire year letting him be on his own. 45K down the drain and he is back at home going to community college. This was a straight A student in high school.
That's shocking. What were nephew's ACT/SAT score & AP exam scores? A grades are a dime a dozen; inflated grades bamboozle a lot of parents.
Anonymous wrote:So if the kid gets carried away with freedom Freshman and grades slipping. You are paying. Financial aid won't cover repeats. Then what? By sophomore year they would be settled into the routine. Freshman year though ???
Anonymous wrote:If I am paying for it - F yeah.
I watched my nephew drop out and my sister was clueless the entire year letting him be on his own. 45K down the drain and he is back at home going to community college. This was a straight A student in high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had three go through college and never asked grades. Only info I ever got was when any of them happily announced Deans Lists or financial awards because success.
We/I believe that once we decided to have children we wanted to give them every opportunity we could and then trust them to be responsible with their decisions.
We paid majority of tuition for our kids education-borrow what we needed, had them get (is it Stafford?) loans. As we saw college as very much one of their first adult decisions we did not choose the colleges for them, require specific majors. All 3 graduated in 4 years. Two went on for advanced degrees. One borrowed for an MBA (3 years out she told me she’s almost done with loans as she first concentrated on maximizing money for a house); other got full ride for law degree though borrowed some for living expenses.
Sounds like your kids didn’t need you to push. Some do.
Anonymous wrote:I had three go through college and never asked grades. Only info I ever got was when any of them happily announced Deans Lists or financial awards because success.
We/I believe that once we decided to have children we wanted to give them every opportunity we could and then trust them to be responsible with their decisions.
We paid majority of tuition for our kids education-borrow what we needed, had them get (is it Stafford?) loans. As we saw college as very much one of their first adult decisions we did not choose the colleges for them, require specific majors. All 3 graduated in 4 years. Two went on for advanced degrees. One borrowed for an MBA (3 years out she told me she’s almost done with loans as she first concentrated on maximizing money for a house); other got full ride for law degree though borrowed some for living expenses.