IDoDis
Knows the password to get into the Moose Lodge
- Joined
- Jan 14, 2006
- Messages
- 5,567
After months of applications, essays, arts supplements, and auditions DD selected a school and we put down a deposit last night for the school. We can now breath a sigh of relief!!!.

We drive up next week for a day long orientation and to register for classes! Yikes!!!
Her school offered a new Facebook program called roomsync, that shows you kids with the same likes you have. She didn't want to try it, because she is going to live in the film studies learning community, so she figured with only a small group of kids in the community she wouldn't find a roommate that way. I suggested she at least sign up and maybe just meet some kids, and by the next day she had a roommate LOL. They have all the same interests, both theater kids, love all the same shows, they both played Lucy in Charlie Brown last year. So just like that, instant roomate.
She also found two girls in the film program from Germany and Atlanta! Go figure that people would come up here for Film. The Atlanta girl is going to be in for a rude awakening come next winter though LOL.
What a great story! It sounds like they will be a great match for each other. Is roomsync on Facebook? I think that's the program that DD will be using. We filled out the dorm application and paid a deposit, but haven't heard anything back about how to sign up for the roommate selection. I will have to call and find out. I suppose we need to go in and sign a lease. The dorm application didn't say anything about next steps.

We are winding down also. She has a pretty easy semester this time, 3 college classes and band. We went to an accepted student day at OU and found out by her second semester next year she will be considered a sophomoreAnd she may be eligible to work in a lab and make $10/hr
Prom dress and grad dress bought, party almost planned, roommates selected, room assigning starts next week ( she is the first round ). She just signed up for her 2 day college orientation in June. Whew!
And congrats to all our kids!
It sounds like everything is right on track. That's awesome that she has such a great head start with her credits. DD is taking her first dual enrollment class this last semester. She says now she wishes she had taken more of them instead of all of the AP classes because the college class is easier and she wouldn't be having cram for AP tests after she's already done with school in May.
I haven't updated about our progress in getting to graduation and off to college in a while because of some family issues that have come up in the past couple of weeks (my Mom passed away suddenly two weeks ago). But here I am with a lot of BIG updates
We put the deposit down for the in state school that offered the free tutuion scholarship that DD kept saying she would NOT go to because it was a school 'for losers and stoners'. We told her that if she found a full tuition scholarship to her first school she could go there instead (she still has not filled out a SINGLE scholarship application). I knew that eventually she would come around and realize that the full tuition scholarship school was a GOOD solid option for her.
So one day, out of the blue she came home from school and was super excited about the school because she found out that she could major in Theater with a concentration on the technical stuff (she loves the backstage stuff!!) in addition to the chemistry major she was considering. So now she's all gung ho about the school and her double major. Whatever, as long as she has an academic major, I'm good with that.
She also found out that the dorm for the 'living learning community' (for the honors program) is one of few dorms that has air conditioning, and she can opt for a suite instead of a regular double room. Hopefully she will get a suite (they have 4 single rooms and a common area plus a bathroom), but we haven't gotten confirmation on that yet.
Furthermore, she announced to me (on that same day) that she has decided to go to the prom with her group of friends, despite her earlier insistence that she was not going to go. So now I need to take her shopping for a prom dress. But she says she's NOT going to wear a dress...so I don't know what she thinks she's going to wear....that might be very interesting... Does anyone know of any girls that haven't worn a dress to a prom??
On top of that, our local Board Of Ed has decided to shorten our local school calendar from our normal 184 days to the state mandated 180 days, so we have 4 less days to make up. That means that the last day of school will now be earlier, only June 24th instead of June 30.So now we know for sure that graduation will be on June 24th.
We have also scheduled college orientation. All the public schools in our state end in mid-June, yet the state college she is attending have two day orientations in late may/june. So she's going to have to miss two days of school to attend the orientation. That seems so weird to me because when I had my college orientation (back in the days when the dinosaurs roamed the earth), orientation was the week before classes started. Anyway, we had a conflict with all but one of the orientation dates...they all either interfered with senior outing, graduation, or finals, except for ONE of them.So that's the one she's going to.
Tomorrow she's going to accepted students day. I just hope she enjoys it.
That's great that she decided to go with the full tuition scholarship. It's strange that orientation is so early when seniors are still in school. Maybe the schools in your area get out later than most schools in your state. How did the "accepted students day" go? We never had orientation back in my dinosaur days of college. If we did, I never knew about it. I just used a campus map and figured out where I needed to be. Now college orientations seem to be a requirement for all incoming freshmen.
I have been battling a bad virus and am now at the stage where I don't have a voice. Good thing it's a weekend and I don't have to teach! Today is the first day that I've felt like I'm getting my energy back.
I have a question about spending money. Will everyone give their kid a certain amount of money each month? DH and I don't want DD to work her first year so that she can focus on being a student. She's been saving half of each paycheck so that she'll have a nest egg for spending money, but she also wants to save up for a different car because the one she has probably won't last her through the next 8 years of school. When she asked me if we'd be giving her any money each month, I said, "Have you ever heard of the phrase 'poor starving college student?' Well, you're going to be one!"

Of course I know we'll end up helping her, but I'm not sure how much, so I'm wondering what everyone else is doing. I guess the more income one has, the more they can give, but just getting a general idea would help.