Mike
Member
For you parents of high schoolers (past or present), I have a question for you. How much do you monitor and push them in school, and when do you allow them to make their own decisions and live with the consequences.
It's summer time, and this isn't very timely, but it's something I've been meaning to put out there. Our youngest struggles in school (heading into the 4th grade), so we need to support her a lot. Our older two (8th & 10th grade) get great grades. Our son heading into the 10th grade gets nearly all A's in an honors program, but if we weren't constantly checking his grades online and emailing teachers about missing papers, he wouldn't be achieving what he does. It's the same with our daughter.
Julie and I struggle a lot with allowing them to operate on their own, because we don't want them to harm their academic futures when we can take measures to keep them on track. We won't be able to be there forever. At some point, they will have to sink or swim on their own merit. In college, it will all be up to them.
So, what are the parenting philosophies that you have with school work?
It's summer time, and this isn't very timely, but it's something I've been meaning to put out there. Our youngest struggles in school (heading into the 4th grade), so we need to support her a lot. Our older two (8th & 10th grade) get great grades. Our son heading into the 10th grade gets nearly all A's in an honors program, but if we weren't constantly checking his grades online and emailing teachers about missing papers, he wouldn't be achieving what he does. It's the same with our daughter.
Julie and I struggle a lot with allowing them to operate on their own, because we don't want them to harm their academic futures when we can take measures to keep them on track. We won't be able to be there forever. At some point, they will have to sink or swim on their own merit. In college, it will all be up to them.
So, what are the parenting philosophies that you have with school work?