Anonymous wrote:Are you sure DD didn’t break her own phone and is blaming it on her roommate because she is afraid of repercussions? Have you considered this as a possibility?
Anonymous wrote:What if the roommate narced on your daughter for something and your daughter is lying? What if the girl hooked up with a boy your daughter liked and it stoked tension? Teens can be super conniving to get you to take their side and get what they want (different dorm, deflect from poor grades).
I'd be really suspicious your daughter is hitting you with this so late in the semester is all.
Anonymous wrote:This. Why does anything think a student RA is supposed to handle theft? RA plan little outings and movie nights, they aren't the dorm police.Anonymous wrote:
OP,
You need to learn how to communicate salient points in your first post.
The breaking of the phone should have been reported to an adult at once, and police possibly contacted. That and all other events which rise to that level.
At this point, your daughter should document this with an adult in charge in order to signal that her roommate is potentially mentally disturbed, and not hesitate to move since this is affecting her sense of security.
If you wanted financial compensation, your DD should have filed a police report immediately. You should both learn from this experience.
Anonymous wrote:This. Why does anything think a student RA is supposed to handle theft? RA plan little outings and movie nights, they aren't the dorm police.Anonymous wrote:
OP,
You need to learn how to communicate salient points in your first post.
The breaking of the phone should have been reported to an adult at once, and police possibly contacted. That and all other events which rise to that level.
At this point, your daughter should document this with an adult in charge in order to signal that her roommate is potentially mentally disturbed, and not hesitate to move since this is affecting her sense of security.
If you wanted financial compensation, your DD should have filed a police report immediately. You should both learn from this experience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Move to the single.
Growing up is hard to do.
What does this mean? And yes, she is moving in 3 days.
Going off to college is about growing up. Dealing with crazy roommates is part of that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your daughter’s roommate has mental issues. If the RA is useless, she needs to go to the RA’s supervisor or other campus official. She should take the opportunity to leave.
But the girl has to advocate for herself. This is the growing up part.
+1. You are too involved.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i don't understand why you have allowed it to go this far.
DD just "came clean" about it last week.
Hmm, could DD be trying to deflect from crummy semester grades? Or just trying to justify moving towards friends or a boy in a another (more expensive?) dorm?
This. Why does anything think a student RA is supposed to handle theft? RA plan little outings and movie nights, they aren't the dorm police.Anonymous wrote:
OP,
You need to learn how to communicate salient points in your first post.
The breaking of the phone should have been reported to an adult at once, and police possibly contacted. That and all other events which rise to that level.
At this point, your daughter should document this with an adult in charge in order to signal that her roommate is potentially mentally disturbed, and not hesitate to move since this is affecting her sense of security.
If you wanted financial compensation, your DD should have filed a police report immediately. You should both learn from this experience.
Anonymous wrote:Your daughter’s roommate has mental issues. If the RA is useless, she needs to go to the RA’s supervisor or other campus official. She should take the opportunity to leave.
But the girl has to advocate for herself. This is the growing up part.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i don't understand why you have allowed it to go this far.
DD just "came clean" about it last week.
Hmm, could DD be trying to deflect from crummy semester grades? Or just trying to justify moving towards friends or a boy in a another (more expensive?) dorm?
Not OP, but my DD had something similar and didn't tell me about it. I think she wanted to try and deal with it herself. Roommate was tweeting about the stuff she was doing. That's how we found out -- a little twitter stalking on a public twitter profile.