What we were told was, they have to be there to let you in. They could leave the park but if you would leave the park, to get back in, you would need them with you again. This is what one of the managers told us where our daughter worked.
What we were told was, they have to be there to let you in. They could leave the park but if you would leave the park, to get back in, you would need them with you again. This is what one of the managers told us where our daughter worked.
I don't think it is that high. And she will have to buy them at Company D. She will need to pay for them herself meaning she can't use a credit card with your name....card will either need to be in her name or the good old option of cash.![]()
DD bought regular ticket for a cousin (we had used up all her other ones and her holiday tickets were blacked out) and the discount was 10%. Everything I read says CM tickets are 10% off. Not sure if it is the same on the AP or not.
How did your children that have done the program find roommates? My daughter is having panic attacks so worried about the whole roommate thing. She has lived at college for 4 years but always had a single room. Never had to share. She is asking for medical housing due to allergies and other issues. But she is not counting on it.
She wants to find girls who don't party but enjoy having fun going to parks, the beach doing crafts and sports.
Any help would be great!
How did your children that have done the program find roommates? My daughter is having panic attacks so worried about the whole roommate thing. She has lived at college for 4 years but always had a single room. Never had to share. She is asking for medical housing due to allergies and other issues. But she is not counting on it.
She wants to find girls who don't party but enjoy having fun going to parks, the beach doing crafts and sports.
Any help would be great!
My DD completed FA last year.......an amazing experience. She is still in college so we don't know the long-range benefits, but the personal growth experience was enough. She attends school 5 hours away from home so she already knew how to deal with that, but she grew up so much and became more confident. She's in a small, rigorous honors program at her university and her advisors teased her about it A LOT. They did not discourage her, however, and one even took her to dinner while she was down on vacation. EVERYONE she talks to is interested and I'm sure having this will help her be remembered after interviews. For us it was all about the life experience, though.
Since she lives at home while going to college, we are hoping for the same things in personal growth in addition to learning how to handle money a little better.
Can they live off the money they make during this program for food and fun? I know we'll end up giving her some money but I want her to learn how to budget a little.
My DD is heading in June to do the FA with DCP. From fellow parents whose DDs/DSs have done the program, what did they really get out of the program. Did the experience really do anything for them after college? Just curious. We know there are positives like working for a Fortune 500 company, personal growth, networking, but what else am I missing? My DDs advisor thinks it is a waste of time, and that she shouldn't go. (She's going.) Anything she could say to the advisor?
How did your children that have done the program find roommates? My daughter is having panic attacks so worried about the whole roommate thing. She has lived at college for 4 years but always had a single room. Never had to share. She is asking for medical housing due to allergies and other issues. But she is not counting on it.
She wants to find girls who don't party but enjoy having fun going to parks, the beach doing crafts and sports.
Any help would be great!