I might sound mean to you, but I don't give my college kids ANY spending money, and they have to work in the summer to contribute to their expenses
My problem also is my girls are twins, only one has the learning disability, but if I give one money I will have to give the other money too. My other daughter has a job. The one did have a job, but we could see she needed to drop it.
Just trying to figure out this year.
No, mandatory summer classes aren't a typical thing -- at least not for most majors. Some of the big-deal scholarships offer paid travel opportunities during the summer, but that's not really a widespread thing. My daughter is a nursing major, and she'll have a mandatory summer school class at the end of the summer before she begins her student nursing as a junior; however, it's a five-week course, leaving more than half the summer free.
It is tough being fair to both children when they are the same or close in age.
Anyway, just thought I would share what is working for us.
Interesting. In most (maybe all, I'm not sure of the regulation) state of Florida public universities 9 credit hours of summer classes are required for graduation. It's a way to try to get students to graduate on time.
westjones said:How can summer classes be required? Can't people take off a semester now and then and then pick back up, like if they wanted to work or do an internship or something?
Now here they are tried something new this year and discounted the summer tuition to try to get people to take courses then. But it isn't required.
Okay, so how many kids are out there paying full-time tuition and only taking 12 credits? None of my kids have ever taken such a light course load. Most semesters were 16-18 credits with a couple being as many as 20 credits! No wonder it's taking kids 5-6 years to complete a 4-year degree!Graduation on time rates are down so they are really pushing summer classes here as well. They did discounted courses but they are not required. What most people do not know is that in order to graduate in 4 years more than 12 credit hours per semester are going to need to be taken or summer school. My degree is 126 credit hours and each class is 3 credits. It has always been in the fine print but now they are pushing 4 years and out.
Okay, so how many kids are out there paying full-time tuition and only taking 12 credits? None of my kids have ever taken such a light course load. Most semesters were 16-18 credits with a couple being as many as 20 credits! No wonder it's taking kids 5-6 years to complete a 4-year degree!
That's my goal as well, and at this point I'm pleased with how my oldest daughter's doing.I guess I want her to learn to be 'frugal' but also let her have a little fun.
As a general rule of thumb, you're exactly right. Taking a semester or the summer off is a student's choice, not something dictated by the university. I remember one college friend who dropped out spring semester when her mother was diagnosed with terminal cancer; she went home and took care of her mother, and I'd never say she was wrong to make that choice -- she didn't whine about delaying graduation because it was the right decision for her at that point.How can summer classes be required? Can't people take off a semester now and then and then pick back up, like if they wanted to work or do an internship or something?
I think people know it -- they just don't always push themselves to take as many classes as they can, or they don't plan well. They hear "12 hours is considered full-time" and they figure 12 is a reasonable number. It'd be a rather dismal college student who couldn't divide 126 credit hours by eight semesters and figure out that 15-16 hours per semester would be required to graduate on time.What most people do not know is that in order to graduate in 4 years more than 12 credit hours per semester are going to need to be taken or summer school. My degree is 126 credit hours and each class is 3 credits. It has always been in the fine print but now they are pushing 4 years and out.
I can only address my daughter's experience with this: She knew well in advance that freshmen would be allowed to register on a certain day in May. She picked her classes ahead of time and got up early that day to register online. She got everything she needed -- even a good schedule with no one-hour wasted timeslots. In contast, most of her friends waited. The ones who registered within a week or two of the opening date got everything they wanted, though as the days clicked by, they were forced into less-popular timeslots. Those who waited a long time couldn't get into important core classes, and they were forced to fill their schedule with more electives than they wanted. So they're going to be in just the type of trouble you're describing. They may face the choice of summer school vs. difficult semesters later vs. staying in school more than four years.I think the issue is being locked out of some required sequence classes due to overcrowding.
I can only address my daughter's experience with this: She knew well in advance that freshmen would be allowed to register on a certain day in May. She picked her classes ahead of time and got up early that day to register online. She got everything she needed -- even a good schedule with no one-hour wasted timeslots. In contast, most of her friends waited. Many of them couldn't get into important core classes, and they were forced to fill their schedule with more electives than they wanted. So they're going to be in just the type of trouble you're describing.
Just as the early bird gets the worm, the prepared student gets the classes she needs.
Exceptions do exist, however. For example, I mentioned earlier that my daugther will be required to take a 5-week summer class (not the whole summer, more like 1/3 of it) just before she begins student nursing as a junior. No one can begin student nursing without it, and it is only offered in the summer. But this is a rarity. And it's only one class, which we know about two years in advance.
Well, it's one of those things that really can't be helped -- and it is unique to the nursing program:Wow, that is sneaky...only offering it in the summer.
If she is staying and eating at home mostly, she would likely only need money for "going out" .. dinners, movies, concerts, shopping etc. I'd talk to her and be realistic about her plans, and what you are comfortable giving her. Then on her breaks she could get a job (maybe even something as casual as babysitting) to save up for future semesters.