Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
Without prompting my senior DS has:
--Signed up for a 2-day orientation. He asked about our vacation dates, scheduled it, and took the days off work since it's all day. I have no idea what date it is, and he told me he has prereqs for it that he needs to do
--Found a roommate on IG and applied for housing. We didn't talk about cost because he wanted a hall dorm so he doesn't have to clean a bathroom, so I assume it's the cheapest.
--Been coordinating with friends who are going to school to compare notes and ask questions.
--Forwarded me a payment plan email. I did say earlier that I needed all financial info promptly.
He's told me all of this. I did ask him to look up AP credits and said that I was concerned that he wouldn't have graduate in 4 years, prompting it to cost more. He got annoyed, said he would graduate in 4 years, and that he would handle it (i.e. the details of AP). That's been the extent of my involvement, for comparison's sake.
Lucky you.
I have two kids. My younger is still 14, but already sounds exactly like your senior. Self-motivated, mature, independent, on task, and a do-er.
My heading-to-college kid (same parents, same upbringing) has ADD, depression, and anxiety, and sounds more like OP's kid. We are necessarily more involved.
But you keep patting yourself on the back, PP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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 There are multiple posts from kids who didn’t sign up for orientation as they were told to, and the university rescinded admission.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.
Yup. This did happen to an acquaintance of ours. They didn’t take the deadline seriously and now the son is going to community college in the fall. He’s devastated. Hard lesson to learn.
Wow! Seems incredibly harsh.
Real life is incredibly harsh.
I would remind them a few times OP, and then let natural consequences take effect. May save you lots of money if they have to go to community college. You may want to point this out to them.
Anonymous wrote: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.
Without prompting my senior DS has:
--Signed up for a 2-day orientation. He asked about our vacation dates, scheduled it, and took the days off work since it's all day. I have no idea what date it is, and he told me he has prereqs for it that he needs to do
--Found a roommate on IG and applied for housing. We didn't talk about cost because he wanted a hall dorm so he doesn't have to clean a bathroom, so I assume it's the cheapest.
--Been coordinating with friends who are going to school to compare notes and ask questions.
--Forwarded me a payment plan email. I did say earlier that I needed all financial info promptly.
He's told me all of this. I did ask him to look up AP credits and said that I was concerned that he wouldn't have graduate in 4 years, prompting it to cost more. He got annoyed, said he would graduate in 4 years, and that he would handle it (i.e. the details of AP). That's been the extent of my involvement, for comparison's sake.
Anonymous wrote: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.
Yup. This did happen to an acquaintance of ours. They didn’t take the deadline seriously and now the son is going to community college in the fall. He’s devastated. Hard lesson to learn.
Wow! Seems incredibly harsh.
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.
Yup. This did happen to an acquaintance of ours. They didn’t take the deadline seriously and now the son is going to community college in the fall. He’s devastated. Hard lesson to learn.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
Without prompting my senior DS has:
--Signed up for a 2-day orientation. He asked about our vacation dates, scheduled it, and took the days off work since it's all day. I have no idea what date it is, and he told me he has prereqs for it that he needs to do
--Found a roommate on IG and applied for housing. We didn't talk about cost because he wanted a hall dorm so he doesn't have to clean a bathroom, so I assume it's the cheapest.
--Been coordinating with friends who are going to school to compare notes and ask questions.
--Forwarded me a payment plan email. I did say earlier that I needed all financial info promptly.
He's told me all of this. I did ask him to look up AP credits and said that I was concerned that he wouldn't have graduate in 4 years, prompting it to cost more. He got annoyed, said he would graduate in 4 years, and that he would handle it (i.e. the details of AP). That's been the extent of my involvement, for comparison's sake.
Your kid sounds great. You sound a little annoying (this list, e.g.).![]()
-A mom of a kid who is mostly together, but sorta still not back to fighting form after months of horizontal inertia. Fingers crossed she'll pop up and
-- start
-- doing
-- things
-- like
-- this!
It's not easy to take a backseat, but it's good for both of us. I am kinda proud of both of us because I don't want to be the parent who is all up in my kid's email. I have been working over the last few years to make a life that's focused on me as my kids are launching. 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: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.
Without prompting my senior DS has:
--Signed up for a 2-day orientation. He asked about our vacation dates, scheduled it, and took the days off work since it's all day. I have no idea what date it is, and he told me he has prereqs for it that he needs to do
--Found a roommate on IG and applied for housing. We didn't talk about cost because he wanted a hall dorm so he doesn't have to clean a bathroom, so I assume it's the cheapest.
--Been coordinating with friends who are going to school to compare notes and ask questions.
--Forwarded me a payment plan email. I did say earlier that I needed all financial info promptly.
He's told me all of this. I did ask him to look up AP credits and said that I was concerned that he wouldn't have graduate in 4 years, prompting it to cost more. He got annoyed, said he would graduate in 4 years, and that he would handle it (i.e. the details of AP). That's been the extent of my involvement, for comparison's sake.
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.