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Velcro parents or did your parents take you to college and how long did they stay?

moshquerade

No Lifer
Parents sticking around too long. Thinking they should have a say in everything up to where the student's desk is positioned? No wonder they needed to come up with "parting ceremonies". :\

Students, Welcome to College; Parents, Go Home


Published: August 22, 2010

GRINNELL, Iowa — In order to separate doting parents from their freshman sons, Morehouse College in Atlanta has instituted a formal “Parting Ceremony.

It began on a recent evening, with speeches in the Martin Luther King Jr. International Chapel. Then the incoming freshmen marched through the gates of the campus — which swung shut, literally leaving the parents outside.

When University of Minnesota freshmen move in at the end of this month, parental separation will be a little sneakier: mothers and fathers will be invited to a reception elsewhere so students can meet their roommates and negotiate dorm room space — without adult meddling.

As the latest wave of superinvolved parents delivers its children to college, institutions are building into the day, normally one of high emotion, activities meant to punctuate and speed the separation. It is part of an increasingly complex process, in the age of Skype and twice-daily texts home, in which colleges are urging “Velcro parents” to back off so students can develop independence.

Grinnell College here, like others, has found it necessary to be explicit about when parents really, truly must say goodbye. Move-in day for the 415 freshmen was Saturday. After computer printers and duffle bags had been carried to dorm rooms, everyone gathered in the gymnasium, students on one side of the bleachers, parents on the other.

The president welcoming the class of 2014 had his back to the parents — a symbolic staging meant to inspire “an aha! moment,” said Houston Dougharty, vice president of student affairs, “an epiphany where parents realize, ‘My student is feeling more comfortable sitting with 400 people they just met.’ ”

Shortly after, mothers and fathers were urged to leave campus.

Moving their students in usually takes a few hours. Moving on? Most deans can tell stories of parents who lingered around campus for days. At Colgate University in Hamilton, N.Y., a mother and father once went to their daughter’s classes on the first day of the semester and trouped to the registrar’s office to change her schedule, recalled Beverly Low, the dean of first-year students.

“We recognize it’s a huge day for families,” she said. Still, during various parent meetings on Colgate’s move-in day, which is Thursday, Ms. Low and other officials plan to drop not-so-subtle hints that “activities for the class of 2014 begin promptly at 4,” she said.

Formal “hit the road” departure ceremonies are unusual but growing in popularity, said Joyce Holl, head of the National Orientation Directors Association. A more common approach is for colleges to introduce blunt language into drop-off schedules specifying the hour for last hugs. As of 5:30 p.m. on Sept. 11, for example, the parents of Princeton freshmen learn from the move-in schedule, “subsequent orientation events are intended for students only.”

The language was added in recent years to draw a clear line, said Thomas Dunne, the associate dean of undergraduates. “It’s easy for students to point to this notation and say, ‘Hey, Mom, I think you’re supposed to be gone now,’ ” he said. “It’s obviously a hard conversation for students to have with parents.”

For evidence, consider a chat-board thread by new Princeton parents on the Web site College Confidential. “Do parents hang around for a day or two after orientation in case their kids need something?” one poster, mrscollege, asked. “I say no, but we have a friend who is planning to hang around for a while in Princeton for her son just in case.”

Some undergraduate officials see in parents’ separation anxieties evidence of the excesses of modern child-rearing. “A good deal of it has to do with the evolution of overinvolvement in our students’ lives,” said Mr. Dougharty of Grinnell. “These are the baby-on-board parents, highly invested in their students’ success. They do a lot of living vicariously, and this is one manifestation of that.”

He and other student-life officials encourage parents to detach — not just at drop-off but throughout the freshman year, including limiting phone calls and text messages.

Parents, of course, know that in their head. But they still struggle to let go.

After lunch on Saturday at Grinnell, before the hail and farewell ceremony, Gary and Glorialynn Calderon easily welled up while visiting the campus mailroom with their daughter. “It’s hard, we’re overprotective,” Mr. Calderon admitted.

His wife, a kindergarten teacher, said Grinnell’s message that at 4 p.m. college was starting and parents must go reminded her of what she tells the mothers and fathers of her pupils on the first day of school: “Say goodbye and just leave, because the kids calm down.”

Their daughter, Aileen, a softball player, said that she had initially been fearful about starting college, but “now I’m excited and ready to go.”
That seemed altogether typical of the freshmen, who were looking forward to the “floor bonding” exercises with dorm mates and were failing to share parental nostalgia.

The pressure to let go had really begun a year earlier while touring colleges, said Leslie Nelson, who with his wife, Jill Hayman, had spent three days driving their son, Micah, from New York City.

Ms. Hayman corrected her husband: “I think the pressure starts when the umbilical cord falls off,” she said. “I’m not the only mom here who’s been dreading this since that day.”

As a comfort, she had read books about the stages of grief. “You have to just allow yourself to experience the loss and grieve over what’s gone,” she said.

But Micah was eager to get on with it. “I haven’t been thinking about anything they’ve been saying,” he said, as his parents looked on.
As for Mr. Dougharty of Grinnell College, for the first time in his academic career he missed his own campus’s move-in day. He and his wife were busy Saturday, dropping off their only child, Allie, at Earlham College in Richmond, Ind., to begin her freshman year.

Mr. Dougharty had made reservations at a bed-and-breakfast near the campus for Saturday night, but then his wife, Kimberly, questioned why they should stay around after dropping Allie off.

“I had to look at myself in the mirror,” Mr. Dougharty said. “I had thought, ‘On Sunday morning we can swing by and take Allie to breakfast.’ Kimberly was good and sane — ‘We have to get down the road.’ ”
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/23/education/23college.html?_r=1&hp
 
This is why my kids are getting kicked out the door, with whatever they can fit into a suitcase, on their 18th birthdays.
 
This shit irritates the hell out of me and is why so many youths are completely dependent on others instead of being independent. My parents had 6 kids. We had to figure stuff out on our own a lot and we're better for it.
 
i knew a few people in college whose parents were like that. one of them even drove up to school each week to do her daughters laundry

mine moved me in and then were off. I moved in early for preseason so i had no roommate or anything at the time, was one of like 200 people on campus. after that they came down like once a year
 
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My parents helped me move my stuff into my room, made sure I had everything I needed, and left. They only came down after that to bring me home after my first semester and when I graduated. I think that's pretty much the perfect level of involvement. Get your kid there and make sure they're okay, but leave the rest up to them.
 
At first glance I thought the title of this thread was Velcro pants and I immediately clicked on it. Now I am disappoint.
 
My parents helped me move my stuff into my room, made sure I had everything I needed, and left. They only came down after that to bring me home after my first semester and when I graduated. I think that's pretty much the perfect level of involvement. Get your kid there and make sure they're okay, but leave the rest up to them.

Yep, same here. Was a good experience. I wasn't going to wither and die there, its a damn college campus with four walls, a roof, and a meal plan. I was definitely a little bit homesick the first night or two, but I got over it fast. Probably would've been even easier if I hadn't moved in 3 days early and was living in an empty building for the first 2 nights. I got a campus job so I could get there early as a courtesy to my dad, basically to beat the move-in rush.
 
My mom went with me to the orientation/campus tour held before I finally accepted my invitation. After that, my parents pretty much ignored what I was doing there. Same when I went to grad school. I'd get asked how I was doing but that was about it.
 
My parents both took me to school (5 hours away), helped me move everything up into the dorm room, took me out to lunch, and then maybe helped me unpack for an hour or two. I don't really see any problem with that. It was freaking hot and there was no AC and I didn't want to be doing it for 8 hours alone. It's not like they organized my room for me.
 
Wow, my parents dropped me off with my stuff and helped me set up, then we had lunch and they left. I can't imagine them staying around for that long.
 
My family dropped me off, got my room situated then I had my first football meeting at 3 PM that afternoon for incoming freshmen. Pretty quick and painless.
 
I'll take my daughter to school, help her carry things to her room, then get the hell out. She's 12, and she's already pretty capable of handling things on her own. By the time college comes, she won't need any hand holding.
 
I can remember my parents being up at my college twice. Once to help me move in freshman year. Another to attend my graduation ceremony.
 
ditto what everyone else in this thread said.

my parents helped move me in at the beginning of the semester, took me to Walmart to buy me stuff (groceries, odds and ends), and then took off. they'd visit for an afternoon once or twice a semester.
 
My stuff was still laying in a pile, I said "thanks for helping me carry it up to my room, Mom. Love you, drive safe on the way home." "Don't you want help putting it all away?" "No, I'll do that later. I'm going to meet some new friends before all the cliques form."

Just dropped my youngest son off to college Saturday. Thankfully I didn't have to carry the 36" television up any stairs - that sucker is heavy, even for 2 people. The last thing I carried in was his refrigerator with a 30 pack in it. "You might want to shut your door while you take them out of the box so that the fridge door closes. Do good this semester, love you, see ya."
 
I've noticed that "Parent's Weekend" varies widely from campus to campus. At the first university I went to, maybe 2 or 3 kids on my floor (about 30 kids) had parents come to visit. At another local university, it's almost the exact opposite.
 
My parents helped move all of my shit from the van to my room freshman year, then once it was all inside, but most certainly not situated, we went to Eddie George's Grill down the street, grabbed some grub, then they left.

Every year they never spent much time down here, only enough to get my stuff unloaded at my place but never stayed longer than me getting everything out of boxes. We all preferred it that way. 2.5hr drive, one-way, will make you want to get things done quickly.

It was cool though, they came down the weekend of graduation, and the night before we stopped at back at Eddie George's and grabbed some grub and brew.
 
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