Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After spending some time on a parent Facebook group, none of this surprises me. Parents are way over-involved. I've seen people trying to find roommates for their college seniors! (This is always for "a sweet young man who doesn't drink and loves studying and quiet.")
Before my son picked his freshman classes, I did make sure he had the four-year plan for his major and a list of gen ed. classes handy. For both kids, I check in once in a while to make sure they have been able to get the classes they need to stick to the four-year graduation plan, although one of them feels this is too much intervention.
That’s too much intervention. That’s what their academic advisors are for.
I don’t think that’s too much intervention at all. It is minimal and no different than he would be doing checking in with his boss, who is paying him, to make sure he’s on track for projects. In this case it’s checking in with the person paying massive amounts of money for the degree to be completely in 4 years. Reasonable.
That’s ridiculous logic.
Why? I don’t give a crap what you want to do with your kid. But for the over $120K I will be spending on each of their college educations, I have NO problem going though reviewing that my kids are on track for graduating on time before each college year, and making sure they’re squared away on the classes they’re taking to graduate on time. They’re not fine with that? I’ll use the money for something else.
God I hope they immediately becone stay at home parents. Or artists or buskers. Ou
For that amount of money, my kid better have a good academic advisor. Otherwise, you’re wasting your money if you need to micro-manage their college education.
I’m sorry, but checking that one thing as the payer of their education and them having independence on the rest is not micromanaging.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After spending some time on a parent Facebook group, none of this surprises me. Parents are way over-involved. I've seen people trying to find roommates for their college seniors! (This is always for "a sweet young man who doesn't drink and loves studying and quiet.")
Before my son picked his freshman classes, I did make sure he had the four-year plan for his major and a list of gen ed. classes handy. For both kids, I check in once in a while to make sure they have been able to get the classes they need to stick to the four-year graduation plan, although one of them feels this is too much intervention.
That’s too much intervention. That’s what their academic advisors are for.
I don’t think that’s too much intervention at all. It is minimal and no different than he would be doing checking in with his boss, who is paying him, to make sure he’s on track for projects. In this case it’s checking in with the person paying massive amounts of money for the degree to be completely in 4 years. Reasonable.
That’s ridiculous logic.
Why? I don’t give a crap what you want to do with your kid. But for the over $120K I will be spending on each of their college educations, I have NO problem going though reviewing that my kids are on track for graduating on time before each college year, and making sure they’re squared away on the classes they’re taking to graduate on time. They’re not fine with that? I’ll use the money for something else.
God I hope they immediately becone stay at home parents. Or artists or buskers. Ou
For that amount of money, my kid better have a good academic advisor. Otherwise, you’re wasting your money if you need to micro-manage their college education.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After spending some time on a parent Facebook group, none of this surprises me. Parents are way over-involved. I've seen people trying to find roommates for their college seniors! (This is always for "a sweet young man who doesn't drink and loves studying and quiet.")
Before my son picked his freshman classes, I did make sure he had the four-year plan for his major and a list of gen ed. classes handy. For both kids, I check in once in a while to make sure they have been able to get the classes they need to stick to the four-year graduation plan, although one of them feels this is too much intervention.
That’s too much intervention. That’s what their academic advisors are for.
I don’t think that’s too much intervention at all. It is minimal and no different than he would be doing checking in with his boss, who is paying him, to make sure he’s on track for projects. In this case it’s checking in with the person paying massive amounts of money for the degree to be completely in 4 years. Reasonable.
That’s ridiculous logic.
Why? I don’t give a crap what you want to do with your kid. But for the over $120K I will be spending on each of their college educations, I have NO problem going though reviewing that my kids are on track for graduating on time before each college year, and making sure they’re squared away on the classes they’re taking to graduate on time. They’re not fine with that? I’ll use the money for something else.
God I hope they immediately becone stay at home parents. Or artists or buskers. Ou
That’s what their academic advisors are for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After spending some time on a parent Facebook group, none of this surprises me. Parents are way over-involved. I've seen people trying to find roommates for their college seniors! (This is always for "a sweet young man who doesn't drink and loves studying and quiet.")
Before my son picked his freshman classes, I did make sure he had the four-year plan for his major and a list of gen ed. classes handy. For both kids, I check in once in a while to make sure they have been able to get the classes they need to stick to the four-year graduation plan, although one of them feels this is too much intervention.
That’s too much intervention. That’s what their academic advisors are for.
I don’t think that’s too much intervention at all. It is minimal and no different than he would be doing checking in with his boss, who is paying him, to make sure he’s on track for projects. In this case it’s checking in with the person paying massive amounts of money for the degree to be completely in 4 years. Reasonable.
That’s ridiculous logic.
Why? I don’t give a crap what you want to do with your kid. But for the over $120K I will be spending on each of their college educations, I have NO problem going though reviewing that my kids are on track for graduating on time before each college year, and making sure they’re squared away on the classes they’re taking to graduate on time. They’re not fine with that? I’ll use the money for something else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After spending some time on a parent Facebook group, none of this surprises me. Parents are way over-involved. I've seen people trying to find roommates for their college seniors! (This is always for "a sweet young man who doesn't drink and loves studying and quiet.")
Before my son picked his freshman classes, I did make sure he had the four-year plan for his major and a list of gen ed. classes handy. For both kids, I check in once in a while to make sure they have been able to get the classes they need to stick to the four-year graduation plan, although one of them feels this is too much intervention.
That’s too much intervention. That’s what their academic advisors are for.
I don’t think that’s too much intervention at all. It is minimal and no different than he would be doing checking in with his boss, who is paying him, to make sure he’s on track for projects. In this case it’s checking in with the person paying massive amounts of money for the degree to be completely in 4 years. Reasonable.
That’s ridiculous logic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After spending some time on a parent Facebook group, none of this surprises me. Parents are way over-involved. I've seen people trying to find roommates for their college seniors! (This is always for "a sweet young man who doesn't drink and loves studying and quiet.")
Before my son picked his freshman classes, I did make sure he had the four-year plan for his major and a list of gen ed. classes handy. For both kids, I check in once in a while to make sure they have been able to get the classes they need to stick to the four-year graduation plan, although one of them feels this is too much intervention.
That’s too much intervention. That’s what their academic advisors are for.
I don’t think that’s too much intervention at all. It is minimal and no different than he would be doing checking in with his boss, who is paying him, to make sure he’s on track for projects. In this case it’s checking in with the person paying massive amounts of money for the degree to be completely in 4 years. Reasonable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After spending some time on a parent Facebook group, none of this surprises me. Parents are way over-involved. I've seen people trying to find roommates for their college seniors! (This is always for "a sweet young man who doesn't drink and loves studying and quiet.")
Before my son picked his freshman classes, I did make sure he had the four-year plan for his major and a list of gen ed. classes handy. For both kids, I check in once in a while to make sure they have been able to get the classes they need to stick to the four-year graduation plan, although one of them feels this is too much intervention.
That’s too much intervention. That’s what their academic advisors are for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. One friend also plans to track his phone so she knows if he is in class every day. And she was also able to set it up where she will has access to log onto his college email to monitor every message he gets.
Still cool with all of you?
Really, really weird.
I think Pink Floyd's "mother" captures it perfectly. Also she needs to make sure some dirty girl doesnt give him meningitis. I think that was a TV ad that alluded to that.![]()
Hush now, baby, baby, don't you cry
Mama's gonna make all of your nightmares come true
Mama's gonna put all of her fears into you
Mama's gonna keep you right here under her wing
She won't let you fly, but she might let you sing
Mama's gonna keep baby cozy and warm
Ooh baby, ooh baby, ooh baby
Of course mama's gonna help build the wall
Mother, do you think she's good enough?
For me?
Mother, do you think she's dangerous
To me?
That is a misogynist song if I ever heard one. No, mothers do not ruin their kids' lives with care and protection. Mothers are not dangerous to their kids at all. That song is utter BS and you know it. How come we don't have a song about abusive dad when there are so, so, so many of them? No, moms should not sign their kids for college classes, but all normal parents will look out for their kids for as long as they can. Do you know what kind of parent is the worst? The one that does not care. This is just another example of society putting women down. You are damned if you do, damned how you do, and damned if you don't.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After spending some time on a parent Facebook group, none of this surprises me. Parents are way over-involved. I've seen people trying to find roommates for their college seniors! (This is always for "a sweet young man who doesn't drink and loves studying and quiet.")
Before my son picked his freshman classes, I did make sure he had the four-year plan for his major and a list of gen ed. classes handy. For both kids, I check in once in a while to make sure they have been able to get the classes they need to stick to the four-year graduation plan, although one of them feels this is too much intervention.
That’s too much intervention. That’s what their academic advisors are for.
Anonymous wrote:Even if it’s HS seniors it’s stupid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My friends husband would drive 2 hours each way to help his son with his economics homework. Unbelievable. He did this drive many times specifically to do/help with the economics homework.
LOL someone should have taught him how to use Zoom so he could save on gas and time!
That's why the post is ridiculous. Clearly dad wanted to go spend time with his son and used the economics help as an excuse so stepmom wouldn't object to the visits.