Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids often go to school OOS when they can’t wait to get away from family.
yea, I know of a few kids who are looking to go as far away as possible to get away from their parents.
The kids I know who are close to their family want to be at least within 3 hours.
Also, coming home for the holidays will be a major PITA for those kids who go really far away. Could be why they go that far, though, so they have an excuse to not come home for the holidays.
My college roommate and I were very close with our families.
I wound up 8 hour drive from home and she was a 4 hour flight.
Granted, she was quite well off and I was more middle to upper middle class.
I just wound up there. My mom had wanted me to go away to college because she was not allowed to in the 60s.
I enjoyed being able to have a little freedom during those years. I grew as a person while remaining tight with my family.
And this was before cell phones and zoom and all that tech that connects us even more
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"13th grade/year" is an expression used by people who want to disparage state schools that are popular among students. They usually use that term because their kids didn't get in and they have a huge chip on their shoulder that they just can't shake. No matter that these schools are all large and there is next to zero chance of randomly running into someone from high school.
In other words, it's a form of face-saving. Disparaging the school(s) that didn't accept your kids. Very typical for DCUM.
Maybe this but it could also be a way to poke at those that seem to remain within the same bubble that they grew up in. All this talk about diversity but there is something to geographic diversity as well.
This is it exactly. Same people. Same dramas. Different school.
I can understand this being the case at a small school, but at a large state univ? There are so many people there, you aren't going to only see/interact with people from your own HS.
I’m in Texas and it’s certainly a thing at the public universities
So, in the large TX public university that has thousands of kids from all over TX, people are bumping into and interacting with most of the peers from their HS?![]()
I went to a large public college in CA, and I think I bumped into two people I knew from my HS the entire four years I was there.
Maybe those kids in TX seek certain types of groups out that those peers are also a part of. So, in that way, it's like 13th yr of HS. I didn't seek the same group out, hence, I rarely saw those people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids often go to school OOS when they can’t wait to get away from family.
yea, I know of a few kids who are looking to go as far away as possible to get away from their parents.
The kids I know who are close to their family want to be at least within 3 hours.
Also, coming home for the holidays will be a major PITA for those kids who go really far away. Could be why they go that far, though, so they have an excuse to not come home for the holidays.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"13th grade/year" is an expression used by people who want to disparage state schools that are popular among students. They usually use that term because their kids didn't get in and they have a huge chip on their shoulder that they just can't shake. No matter that these schools are all large and there is next to zero chance of randomly running into someone from high school.
In other words, it's a form of face-saving. Disparaging the school(s) that didn't accept your kids. Very typical for DCUM.
Maybe this but it could also be a way to poke at those that seem to remain within the same bubble that they grew up in. All this talk about diversity but there is something to geographic diversity as well.
This is it exactly. Same people. Same dramas. Different school.
I can understand this being the case at a small school, but at a large state univ? There are so many people there, you aren't going to only see/interact with people from your own HS.
I’m in Texas and it’s certainly a thing at the public universities
Anonymous wrote:Kids often go to school OOS when they can’t wait to get away from family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"13th grade/year" is an expression used by people who want to disparage state schools that are popular among students. They usually use that term because their kids didn't get in and they have a huge chip on their shoulder that they just can't shake. No matter that these schools are all large and there is next to zero chance of randomly running into someone from high school.
In other words, it's a form of face-saving. Disparaging the school(s) that didn't accept your kids. Very typical for DCUM.
Maybe this but it could also be a way to poke at those that seem to remain within the same bubble that they grew up in. All this talk about diversity but there is something to geographic diversity as well.
This is it exactly. Same people. Same dramas. Different school.
I can understand this being the case at a small school, but at a large state univ? There are so many people there, you aren't going to only see/interact with people from your own HS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids often go to school OOS when they can’t wait to get away from family.
No, it's because they have a fully funded 529 or trusts from the rich grandparents and your jealous broke small-minded behind can't afford to send your kid anywhere but a local state school.
Anonymous wrote:Kids often go to school OOS when they can’t wait to get away from family.
Anonymous wrote:"13th grade/year" is an expression used by people who want to disparage state schools that are popular among students. They usually use that term because their kids didn't get in and they have a huge chip on their shoulder that they just can't shake. No matter that these schools are all large and there is next to zero chance of randomly running into someone from high school.
In other words, it's a form of face-saving. Disparaging the school(s) that didn't accept your kids. Very typical for DCUM.
Anonymous wrote:Kids often go to school OOS when they can’t wait to get away from family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Help me understand "13th grade"
Just saw this recently in one of the threads.
Why is it seen as a bad thing here at DCUM?
(I grew up overseas where this isn't a bad thing.. in fact, it was seen as a good thing)
It is exactly why most area kids do not want to attend state schools (UVA, VT, WM, UMD) - they want to feel they have lived someone else, and had varying experiences (other than say, spending summer vacations with their grandparents).
couldn't they do that by looking for a job out of the area?
Yep. My VA state school grad is currently interviewing on the west coast. The assumptions here are so absurd, as usual.
What % of VA state school graduates end up working in VA or the DC area?
Your "logic" is really amusing. Think for a minute about all those CA students who attend CA schools. Many probably wind up working in CA after graduation. You're really not making whatever point you think you are.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Help me understand "13th grade"
Just saw this recently in one of the threads.
Why is it seen as a bad thing here at DCUM?
(I grew up overseas where this isn't a bad thing.. in fact, it was seen as a good thing)
It is exactly why most area kids do not want to attend state schools (UVA, VT, WM, UMD) - they want to feel they have lived someone else, and had varying experiences (other than say, spending summer vacations with their grandparents).
couldn't they do that by looking for a job out of the area?
Yep. My VA state school grad is currently interviewing on the west coast. The assumptions here are so absurd, as usual.
What % of VA state school graduates end up working in VA or the DC area?