Nathan Dodge
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,051
- Location
- Near Miami
That was sweet. I hate to disappoint you
"It's just that I'm used to you, that's all!"
That was sweet. I hate to disappoint you
I saw something on TV a guy mentioned an article in the newspaper that cautioned parents about over drilling their kids for the preschool interview.
"It's just that I'm used to you, that's all!"
My ma couldn't get us out of the house fast enough, and the further away the better. Her favorite trick was to open a roll of pennies, take one out, throw the rest out the back door and tell us we couldn't come back in the house till we'd found all fifty.
My ma couldn't get us out of the house fast enough, and the further away the better. Her favorite trick was to open a roll of pennies, take one out, throw the rest out the back door and tell us we couldn't come back in the house till we'd found all fifty.
That's a great idea! How long did it take you to catch on?
I saw something on TV a guy mentioned an article in the newspaper that cautioned parents about over drilling their kids for the preschool interview.
About $1.96 worth.
There was a woman who sued because her child's private preschool failed to result in said child getting in a prestigious elementary school. She argued that this could lead to the child not being able to get into an ivy league school in the ultra-competitive school environment (of NYC, I believe).
She ought to research what Ivy League admissions officers consider in their candidates - Elementary school doesn't even factor in!
The idea she argued was that in the ultra competitive educational market in NYC, a child's elementary school affects their middle school admission, which impacts their high school admission. A child's high school that they graduate from does have some implications for college.
This was a preschool that was $19,000 a year and advertised that they prepared children for the educational tests that are used to determine elementary school admissions. Her argument was that her child was not adequately prepared for the exam, which she said could have reprecussions throughout her child's life. http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/15/nyregion/15suit.html
I find many things about that lawsuit ridiculous, but what I find most ridiculous is that this woman has already planned out her 3 year old's future. Suppose that child grows up (the horror) and doesn't want to go to an Ivy League university? What if they prefer to become a writer, a commercial artist, or a police officer? Perish the thought.
My parents weren't rich, and neither are the vast majority of parents. I was in a very competitive post-secondary market, and many of the kids in my year went on to prestigious universities from regular high schools and elementary schools (I could have, too, but I chose to go to college.) Most of them, including me, never even went to preschool. Not passing that exam won't have nearly as many repercussions throughout that child's life as her upbringing will.
ETA: I noticed shes seeking exemplary damages, which means this case has no precedent. Should be interesting to see how it turns out...
I've been involved in admissions for one of the top universities this woman is refering to. If given two students with similar SATs, grades on state tests, extra curriculars, etc. the university will often choose the non-prep school student. This is especially true if the student is from a "at need" school district. They figure that the student who does that well in a very poor school district is more likely to have "what it takes" to do well because they succeeded to the same level as a student who had multiple advantages in life.
I know its off-topic, but I'd say when you have kids everything changes. By this I mostly mean biologically - you're just a different person once you have kids. You can have ideas and philosophies all you like, but there is some kind of weird change that happens to people when you have little knee biters. I didn't believe this until I had them. Every day they amaze me in that they make me feel some new way I never expected.
I don't know how this will affect me letting my kids do stuff. But I know that I would go completely insane if something happened to them - and no amount of people on a message board typing could ever do anything about that. We're all entitled to opinions - but a parent's decisions are sacred: wide latitude, or tight leash, each is given to us as we see fit.
I can't tell you my philosophy on letting them run around and I've got two of em! Life is simply too tough to try to figure out all in advance and at one particular age.