Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Never listen to a stranger telling you not to help your family succeed.
+ 100
Anonymous wrote:Never listen to a stranger telling you not to help your family succeed.
Anonymous wrote:Never listen to a stranger telling you not to help your family succeed.
Anonymous wrote:I'm so happy my parents weren't crazy.
Anonymous wrote:Never listen to a stranger telling you not to help your family succeed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a college professor I can assure everyone here that the majority of students don’t know there is a syllabus, let alone read it. So I’m not sure how parents are able to get their hands on it.
+1 Thanks for the humor, fellow professor!
But seriously, parents, you really do not need your kid's college syllabi. Even if your kid has EF issues, there are a ton of supports at colleges for students. There are learning centers, deans, counselors, etc. Part of the college experience is allowing your child to navigate for themselves how to find and use these supports. I realize that there are some parents who have signed up to be their child's EF "coach" even in college, but that to me says more about the parent's need to feel needed and relevant than about the kid's ability to handle this on their own. There are an increasing number of studies out there suggesting a link between over-parenting and children's lack of confidence (and subsequent anxiety and depression). This makes a lot of sense to me.
Not the lack of money to hire a separate EF coach. Must be nice to be blind yo your privilege.
Anonymous wrote:As a college professor I can assure everyone here that the majority of students don’t know there is a syllabus, let alone read it. So I’m not sure how parents are able to get their hands on it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a college professor I can assure everyone here that the majority of students don’t know there is a syllabus, let alone read it. So I’m not sure how parents are able to get their hands on it.
+1 Thanks for the humor, fellow professor!
But seriously, parents, you really do not need your kid's college syllabi. Even if your kid has EF issues, there are a ton of supports at colleges for students. There are learning centers, deans, counselors, etc. Part of the college experience is allowing your child to navigate for themselves how to find and use these supports. I realize that there are some parents who have signed up to be their child's EF "coach" even in college, but that to me says more about the parent's need to feel needed and relevant than about the kid's ability to handle this on their own. There are an increasing number of studies out there suggesting a link between over-parenting and children's lack of confidence (and subsequent anxiety and depression). This makes a lot of sense to me.
Not the lack of money to hire a separate EF coach. Must be nice to be blind yo your privilege.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a college professor I can assure everyone here that the majority of students don’t know there is a syllabus, let alone read it. So I’m not sure how parents are able to get their hands on it.
+1 Thanks for the humor, fellow professor!
But seriously, parents, you really do not need your kid's college syllabi. Even if your kid has EF issues, there are a ton of supports at colleges for students. There are learning centers, deans, counselors, etc. Part of the college experience is allowing your child to navigate for themselves how to find and use these supports. I realize that there are some parents who have signed up to be their child's EF "coach" even in college, but that to me says more about the parent's need to feel needed and relevant than about the kid's ability to handle this on their own. There are an increasing number of studies out there suggesting a link between over-parenting and children's lack of confidence (and subsequent anxiety and depression). This makes a lot of sense to me.