Anonymous wrote:Just tell her you have made sacrifices to buy her way up society’s ladder. Now she has to take advantage of the opportunity and stop associating with the common folks.
Anonymous wrote:Would this bother you as a parent? We're certainly not rich, it was somewhat of a stretch for us to afford a private college. (No debt.) She begged us and we made it happen. Well, a handful of her best high school friends landed at a large public university about 30 minutes away. She talks to or texts her mother on a daily basis and it seems every other day she's headed to and returning from the public university her friends are at. We're not worried about her grades, she's a great student, but I'm concerned she's not dedicating herself to the private college and classmates there. She claims she loves her college. I can't help but feel like what is the point of wasting 3x more for the private if she's itching to be at the cheap public all the time.
Anonymous wrote:I get the criticisms here, but I also understand the frustration. And for me, it wouldn’t necessarily be a prestige/association thing. If she would rather be at the public that is cheaper, I’d much rather be paying the public price. End of story.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well perhaps having poor friends will help her not become a pretentious ahole like her parents.
Where did you read the household incomes of any college kids involved? Where did you read the private college was [more] prestigious? You didn't, that is your own projection and imagination. OP merely said the public is relatively cheap, which is a dollars and cents fact. That is it.
It is deeply immature to attend college A but spend all of your free time at college B. And when college A costs a lot more, it is a slap in the face to your parents who make sacrifices to pay for it. Teens have no comprehension of what it takes to earn money, let alone the sums involved to pay for college these days.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You really should focus during the first few months on making friends at your own school. After the first semester it gets a lot harder. More students should know this ahead of time.
It's basically impossible after the first few weeks, unless you join a sorority or fraternity.
Anonymous wrote:Well perhaps having poor friends will help her not become a pretentious ahole like her parents.
Anonymous wrote:Settle down, helicopter mom. She's a big girl now. You don't get to dictate her social life.