What would a blog for college parents be
without mentioning the terrible epidemic of helicopter parents? Well, I’m here
to inform you that the “helicopter parent epidemic” is a myth. Sure, every
faculty member or administrator has a few horror stories up his or her sleeve,
but the truth is this. The number of parents who are always overly involved in
their children’s lives is extremely small when compared to the entire
population of college students. Most parents do an excellent job of letting
their children grow and develop through the inevitable failures they experience
in college.
Of course there is no valid way to measure what
“overly involved” is but, the mythic parent who demands grade changes, and
visits regularly to clean Jr.’s room only exists in very small numbers. If they
were rain forest birds, they would surely be on the endangered list. We also
have to look at so-called, “helicopter parents” from the university’s
perspective.
Considering that many professors and
administrators are of our generation or older, their only experience with being
a college freshman is their own. Like us, their freshman year was about three
decades ago, long before tuition skyrocketed, cell phones, social media, and
the Internet existed, and parents became keenly aware of serious campus safety
issues. If, like us, their only contact with their parents was in the form of
an occasional postcard or a weekly call from the hallway payphone, their
experience in no way resembles that of a current college freshman. I mean, have you tried to find a pay phone
lately? Times have changed, and even though colleges and universities are
notoriously slow to change, we need to change along with them.
Most parents who call me with a complaint or
question aren’t helicopter parents in fact; they would be horrified if their
child knew they’d called. They aren’t trying to solve problems for their child,
and they certainly aren’t “hovering” they just want to be informed about
policies or situations so they can offer educated advice or guidance. I am much
more concerned about the parents who sit at home worrying about what they can
possibly do to help their child who has called home asking for academic advice
or complaining about a roommate who is using drugs in the room. Yes,
ultimately, the student will have to resolve such situations on his own, but
from the university’s perspective, a parent who is informed about what
resources are available to the student is an ally, not an enemy.
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