And I consider art an interest. His portfolio has gotten him some pretty generous scholarship money.
Anonymous wrote:I see management roles in his future. He will be the manager of those with high IQ and low EQ.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You stated you spent tons of money on private tutors. If you were really thrilled to have an average student you wouldn't have spent the money. You would let him have C's with a couple if B's and D's. Why post about your lazy kid who got into college because you had the money to boost his grades up. Come back in a year and post when he fails freshman year after you paid 50,000 to an OSS.
Did you read the part about the merit scholarships?
Jealous much?
Why would anyone be jealous of an average kid? I'm guessing average children get merit scholarships
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You stated you spent tons of money on private tutors. If you were really thrilled to have an average student you wouldn't have spent the money. You would let him have C's with a couple if B's and D's. Why post about your lazy kid who got into college because you had the money to boost his grades up. Come back in a year and post when he fails freshman year after you paid 50,000 to an OSS.
Did you read the part about the merit scholarships?
Jealous much?
Anonymous wrote:DS is wonderful, smart, funny, socially adept but somewhat lazy both academically and personally. He half-asses his chores; his cleaning never measures up to my standard of cleanliness. He gets good grades but won't overexert himself. AP? What's that? IB? Why?
Sorry, this would bother me. I don't care if my child goes to an Ivy, a state school, a community college, or becomes a firefighter, chef, policeman, whatever. But I want him to find an interest, and work at pursuing it, and not just do things half-assed and be lazy.
DS is wonderful, smart, funny, socially adept but somewhat lazy both academically and personally. He half-asses his chores; his cleaning never measures up to my standard of cleanliness. He gets good grades but won't overexert himself. AP? What's that? IB? Why?
Anonymous wrote:You stated you spent tons of money on private tutors. If you were really thrilled to have an average student you wouldn't have spent the money. You would let him have C's with a couple if B's and D's. Why post about your lazy kid who got into college because you had the money to boost his grades up. Come back in a year and post when he fails freshman year after you paid 50,000 to an OSS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your child is so not average.
+1 OP lives in a bubble. She also probably thinks 250k HHI is "middle class"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think a lot of parents would do well to accept that their child is an individual with their own interests and talents. They don't have to be mirror images of their parent to be successful. Success is merely in the eye of the beholder.
Pie in the sky stuff, with all due respect. You cannot deny the American economy is changing and there are going to be those without the right skills. Just read in the Post this morning about the long term unemployed will probably be the permanently unemployed. I really don't want Dc to be on the wrong side of this divide. DC doesn't have a trust fund or even much of a safety net. My job to explain to them how the world works. I don't want DC in the future years to say Hey you never explained to me how being a slacker during my college years could negatively affect my life! I have actually heard friends say their kids have complained that they didn't push them hard enough. All about finding the right balance I guess.
) I'm thrilled my son had the same experience. I'm thrilled he actually had an enjoyable CHILDHOOD that wasn't overscheduled in the hopes that he'd be a matured man by 15.
Anonymous wrote:You stated you spent tons of money on private tutors. If you were really thrilled to have an average student you wouldn't have spent the money. You would let him have C's with a couple if B's and D's. Why post about your lazy kid who got into college because you had the money to boost his grades up. Come back in a year and post when he fails freshman year after you paid 50,000 to an OSS.
Anonymous wrote:Your child is so not average.
Anonymous wrote:I think a lot of parents would do well to accept that their child is an individual with their own interests and talents. They don't have to be mirror images of their parent to be successful. Success is merely in the eye of the beholder.