Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not have been embarrassed, but my husband, who grew up in this horrible place, would have been, so he and his parents pulled every string imaginable to get DD into a school that she never would have gotten into otherwise. She's bright and very hard-.working, but severe ADHD and executive function issues. She really struggled throughout her entire high school career at a big 3. She's been at college for two weeks and seems quite happy, but we'll see what happens when classes ramp up. I am waiting for a major implosion. I would have been much happier to see her at a school with a variety of well-rounded kids and where for once, she could stop feeling like she's the dumbest kid in the room. I grew up in a grounded community, where people knew there were many avenues to happiness and success. People in this area are entirely myopic.
If you're so "grounded," why didn't you put your foot down? And why on earth would a "grounded" parent send a kid with the issues that you described to a Big 3 in the first place?
There sure are major holes in your story.
There are not any major holes in PP’s story. Lighten up, Francis.
Yea, there are. This poster is a milk toast parent who let her husband and his family walk all over her and her daughter.
"I am waiting for a major implosion. I would have been much happier to see her at a school with a variety of well-rounded kids and where for once, she could stop feeling like she's the dumbest kid in the room."
Allowing that to happen, yet claiming to be the "grounded" parent? Sorry, no.
Anonymous wrote:I came from an area much like parts of the dmv and went to a great ivy, and honestly felt undeserving the entire time. Yes I made friends, did well-ish (choosing a very easy major), but I probably would have fit in better at a lessser name school.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you are hanging with the wrong crowd. You feel embarrassed because of the way people around you are reacting. None of my social circle would do that. We all have smart, capable kids, but we also don't obsess about rankings, and our primarily interested in our kids' happiness.
Anonymous wrote:My daughter, who has struggled with ADHD, is going to a middle-of-the-road, small, liberal school that probably a lot of DCUMers would down on. We're thrilled for her and she's doing well so far. She found the place that works for her. Surprisingly, her academic experience has been better than my other daughter's experience who is at UVA (e.g., small classes, tons of one-on-one interaction with professors, freedom to pursue whatever major she wants, etc).
Anonymous wrote:There is always NVCC with guaranteed admissions to a number of Virginia colleges & universities
People always say that but isn't the "guaranteed admission" program an application based program? I don't think it's open enrollment. So a kid who is failing out of high school is still not going to have that option. It's going to be your kids who would otherwise have gone away to state colleges, and perhaps could not afford it or something like that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ivy is a lottery. I didn’t win Powerball either. No shame in not winning the lottery.
Also no shame in not buying a ticket and choosing a totally different path. My DC just announced he will not apply to any top 20 schools. We are fine with that. That is not "underachieving" -- he will achieve all he needs to wherever he goes.
Translation: my kid knows he can't get into a top 20.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ivy is a lottery. I didn’t win Powerball either. No shame in not winning the lottery.
Also no shame in not buying a ticket and choosing a totally different path. My DC just announced he will not apply to any top 20 schools. We are fine with that. That is not "underachieving" -- he will achieve all he needs to wherever he goes.
Anonymous wrote:My child is just beginning the college process. Her reach schools are those that dcum would scorn as safeties. But she is autistic with several learning disabilities, and when she started high school I didn't think she would make it to college. So, no, I'm not embarrassed -- I'm thrilled.