So we went to visit the guidance counselor yesterday afternoon.
First, he told us right off the bat that the offer from A&M wasn’t a bad one, but a very good one. That not everyone does get any offer, some people get a flat-out refusal. And that actually, his offer was much better than being offered the feeder community college in the next town over. If you go to the feeder community college, you must take the entire 2 years, so 45 credit hours. While you can take one course on the 4 year campus per semester, and go to sporting events, etc. the reality is that you are a community college enrollee for 2 full years, and transfer in as a junior.
The offer our son got was to go to a system branch school, maintain a B average and get at least a B in every class for ONE year, then transfer to the main campus. Now, that is a tall order for him, because his grades tend to be up and down, like most kids with ADHD, somewhat unpredictably. But ONE year is better than TWO years. He only has to take 4 classes per semester to fulfill 24 credit hours. If he works hard, he can do it.
These branches are farther away from home, it’s true, and some of them are in remote locations, but at least one is a viable choice. The campus is smaller than the main campus, with higher teacher to student ratios, so more attention and smaller freshman 101 classes.
If he accepts this offer, he doesn’t have to do anything else such as apply all over again, write any more essays, etc. Just accept, pick the campus, and get housing.
The other thing the counselor said is that a personal appeal might help his case. I am not going to count on this, but our son said he would be up for doing that. He has nothing to lose as long as he understands that it’s a long shot.
Next time something like this happens, I am going to remember to CHECK with a person who knows more than I do about what has happened, before I jump to a conclusion. I did not know that the offer our son got was actually better than the 2 year community college. I ASSUMED that was true. CHECK with the person who knows, in this case, the guidance counselor.
And the counselor was sorry to hear that our son never completed the application for the other college. He said he suspected something like that had happened, because everyone else had heard from the school long before that. But done is done, it’s too late now.
What we are doing is urging our son to go ahead and accept this offer, and pick a location he wants to at least look at. We will go visit. He has also applied to another state school, and we will go there as well. These are things I should have been doing with him in his junior year. But we didn’t. Anyway, we go from here. I have a lot of hope that things are actually going to work out for the best.