Anonymous wrote:Wow the rudeness here is crazy. I am sorry OP- you came for advise.
Here is mine, politely call the advisor and tell her that you were blindsighted and as a parent cannot afford for her to go back and take the class. She must be able to take it locally or online.
Then in a more firm tone explain that if there is no resolution you feel compelled to go to the team to let him know that the school failed to share with you that your D did not pass her class though I though in most schools a D was still passing? And did not earn her diploma. I know most deans would not want this going around and if you play your cards right, I can almost bet that he will work to make something happen to ease the burden of her having to go back to school.
All this said, your D bears responsibility here too, and I sure hope you will take advantage to teach her a life lesson, actually there are many here, but mostly personal responsibility. It would be a shame if she walked away feeling like she got mom to bail her out.
She is a young adult and many are not mature enough to handle these things, for some of these people to come on and name call is ridiculous and rude. She is growing up but needs to own that this was not solely the schools fault.
Good luck you, I can imagine you are very stressed. Hope it all works out.
Anonymous wrote:Mommy to the rescue because the daughter who just blew $2500 on a failed course needs another $2500 to fix it...oh, and mommy has to tell her how.
Is the daughter too helpless to reach out and call the professor? Chances are your lazy brat never showed up to class, so the prof won't be inclined to help -- but that would be step 1.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Well it kind of is a college’s job to decide if someone passes and graduates. My DH is a professor and he has to submit senior grades a week in advance of grad. People know their status well in advance (not that anyone fails...I don’t think any top 25s fail people!). Troll.
Not all schools are like this. At my school, I took my last final my senior year a few days before graduation. I do recall profs saying that they had absolutely no flexibility on allowing late final papers (if there was a final paper rather than an exam) because they had a tight deadline to submit final grades for seniors. But I think they submitted them maybe 2 days before graduation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She effed up. Just have the college transfer all her credits to a local public and perhaps she can finish up the diploma there.
One school can’t force another to accept their credits. Often a large public will only take 60 credits even if other courses match the catalog. Maybe a for profit designed for working adults...
Anonymous wrote:Wow the rudeness here is crazy. I am sorry OP- you came for advise.
Here is mine, politely call the advisor and tell her that you were blindsighted and as a parent cannot afford for her to go back and take the class. She must be able to take it locally or online.
Then in a more firm tone explain that if there is no resolution you feel compelled to go to the team to let him know that the school failed to share with you that your D did not pass her class though I though in most schools a D was still passing? And did not earn her diploma. I know most deans would not want this going around and if you play your cards right, I can almost bet that he will work to make something happen to ease the burden of her having to go back to school.
All this said, your D bears responsibility here too, and I sure hope you will take advantage to teach her a life lesson, actually there are many here, but mostly personal responsibility. It would be a shame if she walked away feeling like she got mom to bail her out.
She is a young adult and many are not mature enough to handle these things, for some of these people to come on and name call is ridiculous and rude. She is growing up but needs to own that this was not solely the schools fault.
Good luck you, I can imagine you are very stressed. Hope it all works out.
Anonymous wrote:She effed up. Just have the college transfer all her credits to a local public and perhaps she can finish up the diploma there.
Anonymous wrote:It's understandable why your daughter would hide her D from you, but now it's time for her to fix this problem.
Anonymous wrote:
Well it kind of is a college’s job to decide if someone passes and graduates. My DH is a professor and he has to submit senior grades a week in advance of grad. People know their status well in advance (not that anyone fails...I don’t think any top 25s fail people!). Troll.