I agree 100%.
Personally, in both my immediate and extended family there was *never *any question of our parents paying for our college education. We were expected to take summer jobs, apply for scholarships and grants, take workstudy jobs on campus and, if necessary, take out loans to pay for our college. My parents helped in any way they could with extra money here and there. But there was NEVER of question of a responsibility to foot the entire bill.
FWIW, I had never even heard of this notion that some parents think they are “expected” to pay for college until a few years ago.
I don’t think that SOCIETY expects parents to pay for a college education, but my husband & I expected it of ourselves & of our children. When our first child started college in 1978, we were farmers & it was evident that the days of making a living on a family farm were overA combine (harvesting machine) now costs about $300,000 & that is a machine that every farmer needs. So, we felt that a college education would give our children a start that would be a terrific start on any career they chose.
One of our children started in 1978, as I said, the second began college in 1980, the third in 1981 & the last one in 1985. We always had at least 2 kids in college at the same time. For a couple of years, we had 3 in at the same time. We didn’t know how we were going to make it happen…just that we WERE. From the age of 13yrs. on, the children took odd jobs anywhere they could. From chopping weeds out of the neighbors soybean fields, to working for a man who drilled wells. to babysitting 40 hrs. a week (My daughter) Plus, we started putting almost every extra (I smile as I write that word) dollar in a college fund.
The kids also knew that any & all scholarships that they could earn would be very important. Two of the boys won small (about $1500. per semester) athletic scholarships, my daughter won the Freshman Scholarship Award, $1750. total. It had to be renewed every year, so her grades were very important. One son a smaller Freshman Award.
One thing I learned is that these types of scholarships put a lot of pressure on the child, as they are actually being “paid” for their talents. If my sons got cut from the Wrestling team…their “pay” would be gone, same for my daughter & other son…if their grades fell, the scholarship would be lost. It was a good life lesson, if you want something, you have to work for it. They handled the pressure well.
We did it, all four graduated from division 1 good schools, all four of them learned that if they wanted to live in apartments instead of dorms, they would have to pay for that, etc.
What we did was just kind of have a college money pool. We put most of the money in, but they put** almost** as much. I found out later that they often called each other, rather than us, when they needed money for books, etc. If our daughter had extra left over (at the moment), & one of the boys were in need…she would send him money, if she was in need the next semester…he’d send money to her.
During those years, my husband & I both worked 60 hr. weeks. My point is this…if you want it badly enough, you’ll find a way. There are scholarships galore that are never applied for, thus never awarded, so one needs to contact the University one chooses at least a year in advance & pray about it daily.
As I reread this post, it sounds as if Im boasting & I don’t mean to do that. I know one Catholic family with
10 children, who all went to college & their parents had no more money than we did. It’s just that often I find people justify their decision to have only two children, without enough knowledge. God can make the “impossible” happen. My kids in their late 30’s & 40’s are closer than any siblings I’ve ever known & I think that part of the reason is…they were never alone in their struggles, we all did it together, with the help of God.
BTW. they all found the Newman Center the first week, attended Mass through all their years at their different Universities.