My kids went where they chose. They were adults.
It's not a question of "let". At 18, they were adults and could do what they wanted... on their own dime.
Stunting your ADULT child's choices because of YOUR insecurities seems like a jerk move, no?
Well, let's measure real times:That is where that 6 hour thing comes in--realizing that 4 hours is "travel time". The airport is only about 15 minutes from our house so non-issue there. Even if they are 4 hours away, that 4 hours turns into 8 for YOU if you have to go pick them up and 2 hours away turns into 4 so a 2 hour flight isn't any different really.
Our oldest took the bus back and forth to college. That worked well for us and him--the bus dropped him off at the building right next to his dorm.
My DD is considering the University of Alabama for college based on a very generous scholarship she could get there. It is a 12 hour ride by car from our home. Yes, I know she'll be 18 and it should be her choice but it is hard for me to even think of her being that far away. Does you student attend college far from home? How do you make it work? Do you ever worry that if there is some kind of emergency for your child they'd be hard to get to? The scholarship almost makes the school too hard to pass up, but I still worry.
Disagree.My kids went where they chose. They were adults.
It's not a question of "let". At 18, they were adults and could do what they wanted... on their own dime.
Stunting your ADULT child's choices because of YOUR insecurities seems like a jerk move, no?
Well, let's measure real times:
From our house to one of the schools my daughter's considering:
1 hour to the airport
1 hour to get through security
1 hour in the air
30 minutes to be picked up, drive to campus
3.5 hours total travel time at a cost of $418 (I said, we live in the land of high airfare). In actuality, it'd be more -- I didn't click through to the page that adds the taxes and fees.
Same school, driving the 200 miles in my Honda takes 4 hours at a cost of eight dollars. 30 minutes more, $410 more.
If I drive her, I have to drive home again -- that's another four hours for me and another eight dollars. Obviously, lots of things come into play here: Do I want to stay the weekend at the beach, or am I going to turn around and make the drive home in one day? That answer'll vary from trip to trip. And we have family in that area, so that plays into it.
Let's say she goes to University of Alabama, which is completely hypothetical for me:
1 hour to the airport
1 hour through security
1.5 hours in the air
30 minutes to be picked up, drive to school
Total of 4 hours transportation time at a cost of -- ironic -- again, $418.
If we make the drive to Birmingham, that's 413 miles /7 hours 9 minutes from my house. So that's approximately $17 ($34 round trip) in my Honda. But I can't drive back the same day and don't have family there, so I'd also need a hotel room for the night. And a couple meals on the road.
So driving round-trip would cost about $250, depending on what type of meals we ate on the road. I'm also assuming that both parents would go on this trip for the long drive back.
My assessment: Attending the 200-mile away school is in no way worth an expensive flight. Attending a 400-mile school is kind of borderline; it's a two-day trip, but $418 is not a drop in the bucket.
I'd much rather she attend the 200-mile school so she can come home once a month.
Ideally, I'd like to see my girls choose schools in between these two extremes: Not so close that they feel they "should" run home every weekend, but not so far away that they can't come home for a long break like Easter. 2-4 hours away, I think, is just right. Not so close that they can run home haphazzardly without planning, not so far that they can't afford to get home for long weekends. I'd like to see them come home once a month during college -- often enough to stay close and connected, yet still giving them plenty of at-school time too.I'm extremely close with my family. I was concerned that if I went to school close to home that I would be home every weekend if I was able. By going to school so far away, I couldn't come home all the time. It allowed me to learn to be independent while under the safety net of college and my parents. I couldn't get home for all holidays (especially Easter) so I would join my new friends' families for those weekends. I would imagine that in an emergency, I would join their families as well.
I don't see 2-4 hours as a distance that's doable "for every little thing". I see that as a once-a-month visit drive. That's not just about parents -- it's about family, about reminding the student that she's still part of the family. Leaving campus one weekend a month isn't gong to keep a student from taking full advantage of college life.Which is exactly what we DON'T want our kids doing. We want them to have to think twice about coming home so they don't run home for every little thing . . . Going away to college needs to be about THEM, not you.
Pricing out flights from our area to where DD is leaning toward going (only 350 miles away-5 hour drive), $218-big deal...
Ideally, I'd like to see my girls choose schools in between these two extremes: Not so close that they feel they "should" run home every weekend, but not so far away that they can't come home for a long break like Easter. 2-4 hours away, I think, is just right. Not so close that they can run home haphazzardly without planning, not so far that they can't afford to get home for long weekends. I'd like to see them come home once a month during college -- often enough to stay close and connected, yet still giving them plenty of at-school time too.
Right now, my 17 year old has two "probable schools". One is 2 hours away, the other is 4 hours away. I could see her being successful at either one, AND I'm pleased that they fit my ideal criteria too.
We live less than 30 minutes from one of the state's largest universities, and MANY of our high school students choose that school. Most live at home (and for a whole bunch, that's what they can afford -- when you have to make tough choices . . . oh, well, sometimes you don't do what's ideal), a few live on campus but are able to run home literally any old afternoon -- so they can come home to find a certain CD or to wash clothes. I don't want that for my kids. First, it seems that the kids who do this don't fully commit to their education in the same way that kids who live in a dorm do. Living on campus is a constant reminder that you've dedicated yourself to this goal for the next four years, and it makes it easier to see school as your #1 goal. Second, kids who do this tend to hold onto their high school lives too much -- same friends, same part-time job, in many cases, the same bedroom. It's like 13th grade, just the work's harder.
I'd much rather she attend the 200-mile school so she can come home once a month.
This scholarship is great- tuition & room for 4 years plus a few other perks. Even with travel it will cost less than an instate school. But there is the distance.
Leaving campus one weekend a month isn't gong to keep a student from taking full advantage of college life.