There’s no school on Friday, and at least a few families I know are taking their high school juniors on college visits that day.
My high school junior? He’ll probably be fishing.
I’ll be honest: hearing that other families are heading to college campuses on Friday re-ignited some niggling anxiety for me. I first mentioned college visits to my son a few months ago; he’s my second son, so I know now is the time when families start scheduling visits. Come next year, this time, he’ll likely be submitting college applications, and there’s not a lot of time between now and then. Junior year goes quickly.
My son, though, has expressed no interest. Like, none. When I said, it’s time to think about where you might want to go to college, he said, uh. When my parents — his grandparents — asked him what he plans to do after college, he dodged the question. That’s what he does whenever anyone asks.
His class choices — AP Economics, Physics, Trig — suggest to me that he’s preparing for college. The fact that he chose to take the PSAT after I mentioned it would put him in the running for scholarships suggests that college (and the need for scholarships) is on his radar too.
Yet he hasn’t mentioned any schools, nor asked to schedule any campus visits. I’ve been trying to tamp down my worry and anxiety, my niggling feeling that I should be doing more, by reminding myself that my oldest son found his own way through this process. When he was in high school, I worried too. But unbeknownst to me (at the time), he’d been spending time on the internet, researching options. He learned that Music Business is a major, a major that combines his love of music and performing with his passion for business. And he found the best Music Business Programs in the country.
All while I thought he wasn’t even yet thinking about college.
My son, I tell myself, is a smart, 21st century kid with a cellphone. He can research college options. It’s his job, not mine, to figure out what he does after high school graduation. And his job, not mine, to make it happen.
Still, I worried. And part of me thought, I should do more.
Then I saw Jessica Lahey’s brilliant article, “Applying to College: It’s Your Teenager’s Journey; Not Yours.” In it, Lahey, the author of The Gift of Failure: How the Best Parents Learn to Let Go So Their Children Can Succeed writes:
Choosing a college is a highly personal decision, and there’s no better way to give your teenager autonomy than by allowing him or her to take the lead in applying to college… rescuing, nagging, reminding, and micromanaging undermine the emotional connection we all work so hard to establish with our children. Our teens need to know we have their backs and trust in their ability to head out into the world and make it on their own.
YES!
That is why I’m not going to push my son to schedule a college visit. I’m going to let my son (and his brothers) take the lead in planning their own lives. I will continue to be here, as always, to facilitate, to answer questions, to provide technical assistance.
I will trust my son to find his own path through life, and I will equip him with the tools he needs to find it.
One Response
I get your point. We can’t always keep nagging our kids, and too many parents are WAY too overinvolved. However, as a clinical psychologist, I have seen many kids (especially boys) flounder without any sense of direction when parents are not on top of the college app process. Most guidance counselors are overburdened and offer little direction. If we fail to offer some direction and encouragement, our kids may miss critical opportunities.
Your son may be moving ahead, but many do not. Lahey is pointing to the extremes of overinvolvement, and may be inadvertently encouraging well-meaning parents to remain too uninvolved. Most 17-y/o boys are aware of what is right in front of them – and this includes their high school norms, the social scene, and where their friends might be applying to college. They can barely figure out what they want for dinner – yet, we place the burden on them to sort out thousands of college choices on their own. And unless they are paying for it, we have to shoulder the burden of their decisions – or missed opportunities. When parents help them discover other options for college, they provide a service that will last a lifetime. Let’s leave the nagging about laundry, dishes, late nights and grades behind. But staying involved in the college process is a valuable tool that parents can – and should – provide.