Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I lost you at “awful colleges.”
Exactly. I was thinking she was going to spew out D2 schools, but D3? Most of these schools are great academically and a smart choice for their family.
Don’t be obtuse, it’s both D2 and D3. Are these MAC Commonwealth and Mountain East colleges “great”?![]()
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/MAC_Commonwealth_Conference
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mountain_East_Conference
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I lost you at “awful colleges.”
Exactly. I was thinking she was going to spew out D2 schools, but D3? Most of these schools are great academically and a smart choice for their family.
Don’t be obtuse, it’s both D2 and D3. Are these MAC Commonwealth and Mountain East colleges “great”?![]()
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/MAC_Commonwealth_Conference
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mountain_East_Conference
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I lost you at “awful colleges.”
Exactly. I was thinking she was going to spew out D2 schools, but D3? Most of these schools are great academically and a smart choice for their family.
Anonymous wrote:Facebook feed is full of this right now. Nothing we'd ever do, but if you want to brag about your child's athletic offer from D1 UVA or Michigan or using sports as a hook to get into super-selective Dartmouth, Chicago or Williams, be my guest. But those are less than 5% of sporty families. The rest boast how their 15 years of sports obsession netted their kids D3 offers from completely mediocre regional private colleges nobody has ever heard of. Or some open admit regional public commuter university they'd never entertain going to were it not for the chance to play sports. What's the mindset that drives this? Seem so irrational. After freshman year, most kids quietly quit the sport and often transfer to a bigger university their high school friends went to.
Is it ego? Do sporty parents lack the ability to cede the 15 years of sports obsession can gracefully end in 12th grade?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Facebook feed is full of this right now. Nothing we'd ever do, but if you want to brag about your child's athletic offer from D1 UVA or Michigan or using sports as a hook to get into super-selective Dartmouth, Chicago or Williams, be my guest. But those are less than 5% of sporty families. The rest boast how their 15 years of sports obsession netted their kids D3 offers from completely mediocre regional private colleges nobody has ever heard of. Or some open admit regional public commuter university they'd never entertain going to were it not for the chance to play sports. What's the mindset that drives this? Seem so irrational. After freshman year, most kids quietly quit the sport and often transfer to a bigger university their high school friends went to.
Is it ego? Do sporty parents lack the ability to cede the 15 years of sports obsession can gracefully end in 12th grade?
Tell us what you think of the non sporty kids at these loser schools op.
Anonymous wrote:Facebook feed is full of this right now. Nothing we'd ever do, but if you want to brag about your child's athletic offer from D1 UVA or Michigan or using sports as a hook to get into super-selective Dartmouth, Chicago or Williams, be my guest. But those are less than 5% of sporty families. The rest boast how their 15 years of sports obsession netted their kids D3 offers from completely mediocre regional private colleges nobody has ever heard of. Or some open admit regional public commuter university they'd never entertain going to were it not for the chance to play sports. What's the mindset that drives this? Seem so irrational. After freshman year, most kids quietly quit the sport and often transfer to a bigger university their high school friends went to.
Is it ego? Do sporty parents lack the ability to cede the 15 years of sports obsession can gracefully end in 12th grade?
Anonymous wrote:I lost you at “awful colleges.”