Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter did ballet 30-50 hours a week for years and schools didn’t seem to care. They just want a high GPA, rigorous classes and leadership.
How did she do 50 hours/week while also going to school? Genuinely curious!
That was during performance weeks. In the studio from 3-10 and most of the weekend. It was hell.
Anonymous wrote:Okay, so I’m the weird one. Note - my kid doesn’t know anyone who brought a horse to college. Lots of dogs and cats in the apartments, but no horses as far as she knows.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One of the funniest things I ever read on my kid’s college Facebook parent site was someone asking if anyone could recommend a place near campus where her kid could keep her horse. That’s right, her kid was bringing her HORSE to college!
Um, this is not unusual for students who are on a college equestrian team or in the riding club.![]()
Trust me, that was not the case. And if this kid was on the college equestrian team (which doesn’t exist BTW), don’t you think they’d know where to keep a horse?
Anonymous wrote:Okay, so I’m the weird one. Note - my kid doesn’t know anyone who brought a horse to college. Lots of dogs and cats in the apartments, but no horses as far as she knows.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One of the funniest things I ever read on my kid’s college Facebook parent site was someone asking if anyone could recommend a place near campus where her kid could keep her horse. That’s right, her kid was bringing her HORSE to college!
Um, this is not unusual for students who are on a college equestrian team or in the riding club.![]()
Trust me, that was not the case. And if this kid was on the college equestrian team (which doesn’t exist BTW), don’t you think they’d know where to keep a horse?
Why exactly do you think they will do with it if she doesn’t bring it? A lot of people sell them, but if your kid still wants to ride, they need a horse and the horse needs to be ridden and taken care of. It’s not like a family dog that you leave home with mom and dad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Experts (private college counselors in DMV) say that the only two things not to write about are horses and sailing.
They have to make stuff up, so the parents don’t realize they are unnecessary.
Anonymous wrote:Oh, please. Rich people are not discriminated against. All the top schools are filled with filthy rich kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One of the funniest things I ever read on my kid’s college Facebook parent site was someone asking if anyone could recommend a place near campus where her kid could keep her horse. That’s right, her kid was bringing her HORSE to college!
Um, this is not unusual for students who are on a college equestrian team or in the riding club.![]()
Trust me, that was not the case. And if this kid was on the college equestrian team (which doesn’t exist BTW), don’t you think they’d know where to keep a horse?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One of the funniest things I ever read on my kid’s college Facebook parent site was someone asking if anyone could recommend a place near campus where her kid could keep her horse. That’s right, her kid was bringing her HORSE to college!
Lots of serious equestrians do that. I competed at a high level throughout college and even won a national championship my sophomore year. I went to class and rode horses, often 6 or 8 a day for my trainer. My professors were accomodating of my competition schedule too…I always met with each one at the beginning of the semester and laid out which days I would be gone and made sure they were OK with it ahead of time. I also set my schedule with few classes on Fridays because that was the day I had to miss most often. It’s entirely doable to ride seriously during college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter did ballet 30-50 hours a week for years and schools didn’t seem to care. They just want a high GPA, rigorous classes and leadership.
How did she do 50 hours/week while also going to school? Genuinely curious!