Anonymous wrote:Dated 2 girls who went to 2 different all-girls colleges in Baltimore in the 90s.
At Goucher (technically coed then, but still 90% girls) there was tons of same-sex, um, dating? Definitely sex. Between women. Seemed to almost be part of campus culture at Goucher, particularly among certain athletic team mates.
At College of Notre Dame, there wasn’t much dating, very little same-sex activity As far as I could tell, and much stricter dorm / campus rules. Plus, very Catholic. They did some events with other schools. Lots of girls coveted an invite to the Naval Academy ball.
Anonymous wrote:Nbd. Dating doesn't matter that much. What matters the most is having a close, loving relationship with her father (who is hopefully a good husband). She'll end up looking for a man just like her father.
I really didn't date much. My first boyfriend (who was wonderful) and I dated for 5 years and then I met dh right after college and married at 26. I don't really think you need to date around to know what you want.
Anonymous wrote:No, it's not a good idea for them to never interact with boys who basically make up half the population. It's fine if they don't want to date, but they need to be used to interacting with boys at least platonically. Can she join something in the neighborhood? Community theatre or a church choir or any teen volunteer org?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is there no interaction at school? My kids are at single sex high school but some electives are coed starting in 9th and two primary courses are coed stating in 11th. By 12th, a student can take nearly all their classes at opposite sex school if they wanted. Bringing dates to dances started in 9th. What you describe sounds very atypical even for a single sex school.
+1 And most schools here in the DMV area go out of their way to hold mixers and dances. We have both boys and girls. Between the two sets of single-sex schools, it seems like our kids are constantly talking about this event or that.
Anonymous wrote:Is there no interaction at school? My kids are at single sex high school but some electives are coed starting in 9th and two primary courses are coed stating in 11th. By 12th, a student can take nearly all their classes at opposite sex school if they wanted. Bringing dates to dances started in 9th. What you describe sounds very atypical even for a single sex school.
Anonymous wrote:Is there no interaction at school? My kids are at single sex high school but some electives are coed starting in 9th and two primary courses are coed stating in 11th. By 12th, a student can take nearly all their classes at opposite sex school if they wanted. Bringing dates to dances started in 9th. What you describe sounds very atypical even for a single sex school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to an all girls high school and a women's college and managed to turn out a-ok.
That wasn't the questions. Did you never interact with any men those entire 8 years?
And why is this a problem?
You think never interacting with a man until 23yrs old is normal?
No I don't see a problem. You didn't answer why it would be.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why wouldn’t it be? Such an odd question. Plenty of girls in co-ed schools don’t date until college too.
Except they've had plenty of interactions with boys before college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to an all girls high school and a women's college and managed to turn out a-ok.
That wasn't the questions. Did you never interact with any men those entire 8 years?
And why is this a problem?