Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Instead of making a generalization about SLACs, OP should just name the school DD attends. That would be helpful
Agree but don’t hold your breath
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you, OP. I appreciate your post. I, similarly, do not understand the weird hostility on DCUM.
Look, it’s a silly post. I have never heard of a college large or small where every student can register for any class that they want whenever they want. No college has infinite resources of course offerings. OP isn’t telling anyone anything new. What’s weird is that she’s so involved in her kid’s course registration. I’ve never heard of any parent doing THAT before.
Anonymous wrote:Instead of making a generalization about SLACs, OP should just name the school DD attends. That would be helpful
Anonymous wrote:I’m OP. I will never get the weird hostility on this site. My kid is happy at her school. But getting the right classes at the right times is definitely an issue. I didn’t write to complain or solve the problem. I only wrote because this is something I never thought about and i thought it would be helpful to parents of juniors and seniors. People are free to have other experiences. I would love to helicopter but she cut that out quick. This is a different issue that really could not be resolved easily. When you need a required class that is a prerequisite for other classes but the one section is at the same time as another course you need for a requirement (like language) it can be an issue. We are making it work but it can be frustrating.
Anonymous wrote:My kid is doing two majors and one minor in a SLAC now. They never ran into any problem with selecting courses. The advisors and professors always made it possible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you, OP. I appreciate your post. I, similarly, do not understand the weird hostility on DCUM.
Look, it’s a silly post. I have never heard of a college large or small where every student can register for any class that they want whenever they want. No college has infinite resources of course offerings. OP isn’t telling anyone anything new. What’s weird is that she’s so involved in her kid’s course registration. I’ve never heard of any parent doing THAT before.
Anonymous wrote:Thank you, OP. I appreciate your post. I, similarly, do not understand the weird hostility on DCUM.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I'm not here for a judgement on my parenting. She does talk to her advisor, but I am telling you that they are very hands off. The college has a lot more people majoring in the humanities than STEM, so I think it is easier for them to get the courses they need because a lot of them are very broad.
I'm not interested in a critique of my parenting. This is literally just a heads up to parents considering small colleges.
Also, 18 and 19 year olds are not always very savvy about understanding the best way to maximize their courses to meet college requirements and their majors and other interests they have. My daughter didn't understand that she could "double dip" on two requirements and meet both through taking one class and the school didn't make that clear to her. Doing that leaves another course open in her schedule down the line for a class she really wants to take that isn't just to meet college requirements.
Anonymous wrote:I will never understand why anyone choose a school with so few students, so few professors, so few classes, so few options. And they are usually in the middle of the woods. And it's typically cold. Four years of that. And people choose this. Baffling.