Same here. When our daughter left for her freshman year last August, we sat down with her and her total bank account. We helped her work out a budget that accounted for her books and supplies FIRST (most important, and part of her responsibility). She set a 'cushion' amount that she wanted to make sure she'd have at the end of the year.
Once those important expenses were accounted for, what was left was divided by the number of weeks she'd be at school so she knew how much 'spending' money she had. It worked out to about $35/week.
The important thing is she knew it was HER money, and that no more was coming from us. If she shopped smart with her supplies, she'd have more to work with. If she spent only $20 one week, she'd have $15 extra to spend another week.
Along the way, she became very smart about her money since she knew the Bank of Mom and Dad wasn't available.
That's just what I have in mind doing for my daughter when she's a freshman -- helping her figure out how much she can afford per week, and asking her occasionally if she's still on target. IF she gets into trouble, I won't bail her out (I'm assuming she'll live in a dorm and have a meal plan, so she won't have to go without -- except maye clean clothes if she can't afford laundry). IF she does fine with that, I won't offer more than a question here and there in the later years -- she will've proven herself.
I say do whatever works for your family, there is no right or wrong answer. But I don't think it's unreasonable to make them work at least part time for spending money.
I do think there's one wrong answer: To act like an ATM machine, handing out money whenever the college-aged child requests it, sometimes being gracious and other times complaining that he doesn'tknow the value of a dollar or thinks that money grows on trees.
Doing that simply prolongs the child's financial dependance on his parents, and it robs him of the chance to learn to budget his limited resources. If he's allowed to grow up without learning to plan his expenses, he's going to have a hard time in the adult world.
Instead, whether the college student is receiving an allowance or is working for his spending money, he should have to -- real emergencies aside -- stick to a budget, plan, and figure out how to stretch a dollar.
Our plan for our daughters: We've saved for their educations and are able to pay tuition & fees, dorm & meal plan -- you know, the big basics. We will expect them to work full-time in the summer and save that money for books. We will expect them to work part-time during the school year to pay for gas, meals/outings out with friends, laundry, haircuts, and other little expenses. And, of course, this assumes that they're progressing towards a degree; if they aren't doing well academically, everything changes! But I know my children and am not really concerned about that possibility.