Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's been 2 months. She'll build her friend base at her own school soon enough.
Update:
She’s still going to the public university every other weekend.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to Michigan and spent tons of time at Eastern Michigan. Ann Arbor is close to Ypsilanti. Also went to central, western, and state on weekends. My friends came to visit me. Michigan was more expensive, but I received a great education. I had no desire to transfer, but I didn’t care for many of the students - too liberal, east coast, snobby.
It all worked out well. I’m still close with my high school friends. Michigan still opens doors and is respected. I didn’t need friends from there to have a successful career after graduation. The extra money for Michigan was worth it.
I’m glad to hear that you are still friends with your HS friends. I’m in my 50s, all of my friends from elementary school and a few from HS are still my friends. Nobody from college though. I had fun, but the friendships didn’t last a few years post graduation.
Nobody loses high school friends anymore thanks to iPhones, group chats, FaceTime, and social media. So unfortunately, kids don’t put themselves out there as much anymore when they move somewhere new. They always have the crutch of high school friends.
Anonymous wrote:It's been 2 months. She'll build her friend base at her own school soon enough.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get the criticisms here, but I also understand the frustration. And for me, it wouldn’t necessarily be a prestige/association thing. If she would rather be at the public that is cheaper, I’d much rather be paying the public price. End of story.
What people are missing here is that just because she wants to socially hang out at the public school - that doesn't mean she doesn't have a strong preference for the smaller classes and teacher access of the private school. That's what you are paying for at the private...
Anonymous wrote:I get the criticisms here, but I also understand the frustration. And for me, it wouldn’t necessarily be a prestige/association thing. If she would rather be at the public that is cheaper, I’d much rather be paying the public price. End of story.
Anonymous wrote:Was the point of paying for the private college for her to make friends or to get the education that's offered there?
Anonymous wrote:Long-term friends who have known you your whole life are an incredible blessing. I don't have them -- but my DH does. Many from hs, and some who even knew him when they were toddlers. He has some college friends still as well, but they are not the lifetime best friends like his hs friends are. Let her navigate her own social life.
Anonymous wrote:Would this bother you as a parent? We're certainly not rich, it was somewhat of a stretch for us to afford a private college. (No debt.) She begged us and we made it happen. Well, a handful of her best high school friends landed at a large public university about 30 minutes away. She talks to or texts her mother on a daily basis and it seems every other day she's headed to and returning from the public university her friends are at. We're not worried about her grades, she's a great student, but I'm concerned she's not dedicating herself to the private college and classmates there. She claims she loves her college. I can't help but feel like what is the point of wasting 3x more for the private if she's itching to be at the cheap public all the time.
Anonymous wrote:Settle down, helicopter mom. She's a big girl now. You don't get to dictate her social life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to Michigan and spent tons of time at Eastern Michigan. Ann Arbor is close to Ypsilanti. Also went to central, western, and state on weekends. My friends came to visit me. Michigan was more expensive, but I received a great education. I had no desire to transfer, but I didn’t care for many of the students - too liberal, east coast, snobby.
It all worked out well. I’m still close with my high school friends. Michigan still opens doors and is respected. I didn’t need friends from there to have a successful career after graduation. The extra money for Michigan was worth it.
I’m glad to hear that you are still friends with your HS friends. I’m in my 50s, all of my friends from elementary school and a few from HS are still my friends. Nobody from college though. I had fun, but the friendships didn’t last a few years post graduation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to Michigan and spent tons of time at Eastern Michigan. Ann Arbor is close to Ypsilanti. Also went to central, western, and state on weekends. My friends came to visit me. Michigan was more expensive, but I received a great education. I had no desire to transfer, but I didn’t care for many of the students - too liberal, east coast, snobby.
It all worked out well. I’m still close with my high school friends. Michigan still opens doors and is respected. I didn’t need friends from there to have a successful career after graduation. The extra money for Michigan was worth it.
I’m glad to hear that you are still friends with your HS friends. I’m in my 50s, all of my friends from elementary school and a few from HS are still my friends. Nobody from college though. I had fun, but the friendships didn’t last a few years post graduation.
why do you think that is? I'm just curious.
I stayed in touch with friends from pretty much all stages of my life over the years. Emails and social media help, of course. Do you think you were just a couple years too early for that? I'm in my later 40s.
I think that is part of it. I graduated college in 1990 , kept in touch and visited my college a few times but never connected with them via social media afterwards. I was a transfer student from CC, so was away only two years.
When I went to CC, a few of my elementary school friends went also. We all became friends w other students there at the CC and our circle widened. Still friends with those “friends of friends” today.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to Michigan and spent tons of time at Eastern Michigan. Ann Arbor is close to Ypsilanti. Also went to central, western, and state on weekends. My friends came to visit me. Michigan was more expensive, but I received a great education. I had no desire to transfer, but I didn’t care for many of the students - too liberal, east coast, snobby.
It all worked out well. I’m still close with my high school friends. Michigan still opens doors and is respected. I didn’t need friends from there to have a successful career after graduation. The extra money for Michigan was worth it.
I’m glad to hear that you are still friends with your HS friends. I’m in my 50s, all of my friends from elementary school and a few from HS are still my friends. Nobody from college though. I had fun, but the friendships didn’t last a few years post graduation.
why do you think that is? I'm just curious.
I stayed in touch with friends from pretty much all stages of my life over the years. Emails and social media help, of course. Do you think you were just a couple years too early for that? I'm in my later 40s.