Anonymous wrote:I am in the parent group for FSU. There are multiple posts from kids who didn’t sign up for orientation as they were told to, and the university rescinded admission. Parents appealed and it was too bad, so sad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe sign her up for an executive function crash course this summer?
NP, but my senior with ADD and executive function deficits is flailing right now. Yes, there’s anxiety to boot.
Does anyone know of an “executive function crash course” that might be available for college-bound kids? My kid has a summer job for six weeks, but it’s not full-time, so she has some flexibility. Would be grateful for any recs!
I believe The Study Pro in McLean has offered a summer course for kids on their way to college. I don’t see it on their courses for this summer, but call them and ask. My high school kid meets with an executive function coach weekly and it has been life changing. They go through my kid’s school emails together, homework, etc. and map out a to do list for the entire week with time estimates included for each task. By the time they head to college, the executive function part of the puzzle will be routine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“So I looked and sure enough, she's not checked her College X email, or opened her high school email from College X.”
OP, this is a huge red flag to me. Why do you even have access to your DD’s high school email or college email? Did you regularly check her emails during high school? Having passwords and checking your kid’s email is a huge invasion of privacy and is not appropriate. Does your DD have ADHD? Maybe sign her up for an executive function crash course this summer?
NP-I respectfully disagree. Every family is different. In our family if a minor child has an email account the parents have full access to it. We don't read every email but we are able to. When our dd was a junior in high school we created a completely new email account for her to be used for college applications. I would regularly check that email account to see if there were any time sensitive emails. Then I would remind her that she needed to check her emails more often. It is a lot for high school seniors to handle. She got better at it. As she got better at it I faded out. I want my teens to learn how to be independent but it doesn't need to be an all or nothing situation. Once she had picked a school we reminded her how to unsubscribe from other school emails systems so that she would not get flooded by junk email. When she was 18 and leaving for college we talked about her changing her password and that we no longer needed access. She said she was fine with us having it and that it was nice to know we were able to get in in an emergency. And it has come in handy. This past week she was on a school trip with no electronics. Before she left she asked me to check her email daily in case anything came in that needed to be dealt with before she got back. It did. The company that the school uses for fridge rentals emailed her and she had 48 hours to reply or we would lose our security deposit. This set up works for our family.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe sign her up for an executive function crash course this summer?
NP, but my senior with ADD and executive function deficits is flailing right now. Yes, there’s anxiety to boot.
Does anyone know of an “executive function crash course” that might be available for college-bound kids? My kid has a summer job for six weeks, but it’s not full-time, so she has some flexibility. Would be grateful for any recs!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am in the parent group for FSU. There are multiple posts from kids who didn’t sign up for orientation as they were told to, and the university rescinded admission. Parents appealed and it was too bad, so sad.
Find it hard to believe that happened, pp. OP, make sure she has her notifications turned on for email. Between their committed school, plus the continued spam and residuals from other colleges, it's a mess. As long as deposit is in, that's the most important thing. As far as I know, housing for freshman doesn't open up this early. Orientation doesn't either, but may be earlier for a few schools.
She should go into her portal and upload her pic for school ID, start filling out the required docs for emergency contacts, IT and other departments, check for placement tests (if any).
The BIG one is she needs to assign delegates (you), fill out HIPPA and legal forms so you have access to medical proxy, and whatever else she agrees to. Parents and students have to sign. She can also add your email address to receive the same emails she's receiving.
Anonymous wrote:I am in the parent group for FSU. There are multiple posts from kids who didn’t sign up for orientation as they were told to, and the university rescinded admission. Parents appealed and it was too bad, so sad.
Anonymous wrote:I am in the parent group for FSU. There are multiple posts from kids who didn’t sign up for orientation as they were told to, and the university rescinded admission. Parents appealed and it was too bad, so sad.
Anonymous wrote:I don't believe the previous poster. And way to many parents here need to land their helicopters. Your kids will be fine.
Anonymous wrote:Mine is in the same place, and I suspect the previous posters suggesting your child is not ready for college don't have older teens. They will get crummy housing and not their first choice of classes, and hopefully, they'll learn. It's ok and will be ok. Promise.