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I'm not sure how I weigh in on this . . . by the time my daughter is 18+, I would expect that she be responsible enough to take care of this. I mean, she'd have all those years with me beside her, teaching her how to be responsible. If she didn't get it by 18, I would be deeply concerned to send her to college at that time. I would encourage her to take a few years off and get some life experience before wasting money. On the hand, I understand if I'm paying for her school that I'd want her to do her best. But if her best is a C, then that's what it is.
Sorry to sidetrack.
Well, if a scholarship is paying tuition, they typically have grade expectations that must be met to retain the scholarship, so they are informed. As a parent who is paying, I too have grade expectations that I feel should be met, but if my child is 18 or older, then they will not tell me. BTW, my son was a young 17 when he started college.
I'm not sure how I weigh in on this . . . by the time my daughter is 18+, I would expect that she be responsible enough to take care of this. I mean, she'd have all those years with me beside her, teaching her how to be responsible. If she didn't get it by 18, I would be deeply concerned to send her to college at that time. I would encourage her to take a few years off and get some life experience before wasting money. On the hand, I understand if I'm paying for her school that I'd want her to do her best. But if her best is a C, then that's what it is.
Sorry to sidetrack.
Well, if a scholarship is paying tuition, they typically have grade expectations that must be met to retain the scholarship, so they are informed. As a parent who is paying, I too have grade expectations that I feel should be met, but if my child is 18 or older, then they will not tell me. BTW, my son was a young 17 when he started college.