Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ours go so bad when the parents wanted to form smaller groups based on the Greek house the kid go into or for each apartment complex.
Today it has been which school supplies to get and I got shouted down the two suggestions I said which is read your damn syllabus and go to class.
The window measurements to get the right length black out curtains has been answered again and again as an example.
At his school, there is not enough housing for upper classmen to live in campus and most want to be out of the dorm and not under the RA’s watch.
These parents would also freak if they knew how many of their snowflakes had fake IDs.
Heh. My dd was on the club soccer team for her U last year. I seriously got invited to an "X University Club Soccer Parents" group on Facebook. Silly.
I was invited to the "UW-Madison Class of 2026 Engineering Parents Group". Yup, apparently that exists. Because apparently the general parent FB group doesn't offer enough opportunity to helicopter![]()
Anonymous wrote:But the 10% useful is so very useful!!
I've got one heading to Syracuse and I REFUSE to call him "My Slice" the way some other parents do....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ours go so bad when the parents wanted to form smaller groups based on the Greek house the kid go into or for each apartment complex.
Today it has been which school supplies to get and I got shouted down the two suggestions I said which is read your damn syllabus and go to class.
The window measurements to get the right length black out curtains has been answered again and again as an example.
At his school, there is not enough housing for upper classmen to live in campus and most want to be out of the dorm and not under the RA’s watch.
These parents would also freak if they knew how many of their snowflakes had fake IDs.
Heh. My dd was on the club soccer team for her U last year. I seriously got invited to an "X University Club Soccer Parents" group on Facebook. Silly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can anyone explain why parents remain in the groups after their child has graduated?
When my kid started at FancypantsU, parents from the previous graduating class stuck around for a year to provide institutional memory/background, then left so the next batch of parents could talk about commencement, kids' first year after graduating and what might have been a good idea in college, etc. But my kid graduated this year, and we were told to scram. So scram I did!
The admin’s of ours daughter graduated in May and she won’t step down.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ours go so bad when the parents wanted to form smaller groups based on the Greek house the kid go into or for each apartment complex.
Today it has been which school supplies to get and I got shouted down the two suggestions I said which is read your damn syllabus and go to class.
The window measurements to get the right length black out curtains has been answered again and again as an example.
At his school, there is not enough housing for upper classmen to live in campus and most want to be out of the dorm and not under the RA’s watch.
These parents would also freak if they knew how many of their snowflakes had fake IDs.
Heh. My dd was on the club soccer team for her U last year. I seriously got invited to an "X University Club Soccer Parents" group on Facebook. Silly.
Anonymous wrote:Ours go so bad when the parents wanted to form smaller groups based on the Greek house the kid go into or for each apartment complex.
Today it has been which school supplies to get and I got shouted down the two suggestions I said which is read your damn syllabus and go to class.
The window measurements to get the right length black out curtains has been answered again and again as an example.
At his school, there is not enough housing for upper classmen to live in campus and most want to be out of the dorm and not under the RA’s watch.
These parents would also freak if they knew how many of their snowflakes had fake IDs.
Anonymous wrote:I'm on two parent FB pages. One is a high academic state school and the other is a small, Catholic school. The only complaints I've read on the Catholic school page are parents complaining about the food in the dining halls. Otherwise, everything is super positive and helpful. It's a smaller school and the group is not very big so maybe that's why it's a great resource.
The state school FB page is so entertaining - arguments about politics (reminds me of DCUM), questions easily answered by using google and helicoptering. During Covid it got really toxic - the school had really stringent restrictions (for example, no one could be in a dorm room except the residents of the dorm room - you couldn't even have your next door dormmate in your room.) There were parents who were calling out other students for breaking Covid restrictions. I guess their kid was telling their parent about classmates who were breaking the rules, and the parents would post the infractions to "encourage" everyone to follow the rules.
My favorite helicoptering post was when a parent wanted to know how to change the practice schedule for her son's CLUB baseball team. She was unhappy with what time and how long the team was practicing. My DS is on a club team but I have no idea when and how long he practices - the only time I hear about a competition is when he lets me know.
Anonymous wrote:There is a lot of noise, but I found it very useful. We found doctors, restaurants, hotels, advice on parking. I’m glad I joined. I was hesitant.
Anonymous wrote:The annoying part about the parent page I’m on is how so many have not read any of the material from the school and just come to the FB page asking what is already available to them. The kids are beginning to get firm by saying look at the resource (it’s called different things at different schools obviously). Or parents who just now are trying to figure out how to get their student to/from the school because it’s not near a major transportation hub and are SHOCKED that this is handled by the school.
Anonymous wrote:But the 10% useful is so very useful!!
I've got one heading to Syracuse and I REFUSE to call him "My Slice" the way some other parents do....