Anonymous wrote:My kids are in average colleges, mostly because they got great merit scholorships. I'll even proudly name the schools...
DS (27) went to Ole Miss. ROTC scholarship. Plus National Guard.
DS (25) went to Colorado. ROTC Scholorship
DD (24) went to Florida. National Merit Scholar. Full ride.
DD (21) at Georgia. Partial merit scholarship.
DS (17) High school senior. Wants to go to Florida. We'll see who offers the most money.
Super proud of all five. My oldest is married with a baby. They own a business together. He is also a Captain in the Army National Guard. My second is a Captain in the Army - 82nd Airborne. My third is a teacher in DC. My fourth is majoring in nursing. She wants to be a nurse practitioner. My youngest thinks he wants to be an engineer.
Average colleges. No student loan debt. Great kids.
Anonymous wrote:Sorry you don't get that we love and are proud of our kids.
Umm, not really. You are missing the point entirely. There is nothing to "admit" because there is nothing wrong with an average kid and an average college. To "admit" something would suggest there is something to be ashamed about.Anonymous wrote:Well over half the comments in this thread prove OP's point. Like moths to a flame.
This. My DC 1 is an academic superstar also with a pick of top colleges. My DC 2 is an average student most likely going to a tier 2 school. They are both going to be just fine in life. Different kids, different interests, different accomplishments. Where you go to college does not define who you are, your level of happiness or your ability to be successful in life. It does however, often contribute to the asshole factor, op.Anonymous wrote:The really great truth that none of us really wants to admit is that we have very little influence on how our children turn out. It's some random mix of genes and peers, as long as we don't do too much to screw things up. It's more luck than anything else. My DC happens to be an academic ace with a pick of the top 10 colleges. Yes, I'm proud of him but I'd be proud of him if he wasn't as smart and accomplished too. Love is not conditional.
But, I would be ashamed if he wasted his time trying to rank everything in the world and was too immature to understand how little those rankings matter. I wonder why the poster who thinks colleges outside the top 50 are "not worth the paper it's printed on." (I don't know any colleges that are printed on paper). If she truly believed that statement, she should encourage her children to write that worldview/value statement in their college essays. I'm sure Princeton will be really interested in a student who thinks that way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One of the big issues with OPs statement is that there doesn't seem to be a clear definition of an "average" college as opposed to an "above average" college. OP, what's your definition of an "average" college? I'd say that the top 50 national universities (as ranked by USNWR) are above average. The same goes for the top 50 LACs. Would you accept that definition OP?
No. Average to below. Top twenty: above average. Top ten: excellent.
Out of the top fifty: don't even bother. It's not worth the paper it's printed on.
Yeah, those people should just go work at Jiffy Lube. How dare they?
I wouldn't send them to Jiffy Lube, but I won't clear out my savings, retirement, home equity to send my children to a low ranked undergrad. And I most certainly wouldn't bend over backwards to spin that the college is some great place — which every parent of average kids does. Just give it a rest.
Wow. You are truly a terrible human being. Why do you even care if someone is excited about a low-ranked school? How does it hurt you?
It doesn't hurt me. It's just embarrassing your family. Sorry you lack self-awareness.