10 Ways My Expensive Arts Degree Prepared Me for Parenthood
My expensive arts degree from NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts was money well spent – I learned a whole lot of stuff that helps me be an awesome mom.
My expensive arts degree from NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts was money well spent – I learned a whole lot of stuff that helps me be an awesome mom.
For college-bound students, summer is the best time to work on scholarship motivation strategies – to get a jump on the game before school starts.
As my son has started touring universities, I’m finding I have conflicted feelings. I want to help him out the door, but he’s still my baby.
But when they do get into college (and they will), how do we know if they are ready to go? How do we let go as parents this year—on some things—but not everything? How do WE know they are prepared, and what can we do to ensure they are?
Now it’s Senior Year and at times it’s going to feel like you won’t make it through. Of course we will! (This is my second time so I know it’s doable).
Before the kids have moved out completely, I’ve decided to try to start preparing for an empty nest – when it’s just my husband and me at home.
In a recent letter to a university newsletter a mom pleads for the young women on campus to “think of the mothers of sons the next time [they] go shopping.”
The college admissions scandal is prompting a lot of discussions – including the one I’m having with my high school junior.
It’s never too soon to start preparing your kids for college. Check out these 10 Things To Teach Your Kids Before College.
Students seeking college scholarship money need to think long and hard about who they ask to write their letters of recommendation.
My expensive arts degree from NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts was money well spent – I learned a whole lot of stuff that helps me be an awesome mom.
For college-bound students, summer is the best time to work on scholarship motivation strategies – to get a jump on the game before school starts.
As my son has started touring universities, I’m finding I have conflicted feelings. I want to help him out the door, but he’s still my baby.
But when they do get into college (and they will), how do we know if they are ready to go? How do we let go as parents this year—on some things—but not everything? How do WE know they are prepared, and what can we do to ensure they are?
Now it’s Senior Year and at times it’s going to feel like you won’t make it through. Of course we will! (This is my second time so I know it’s doable).
Before the kids have moved out completely, I’ve decided to try to start preparing for an empty nest – when it’s just my husband and me at home.
In a recent letter to a university newsletter a mom pleads for the young women on campus to “think of the mothers of sons the next time [they] go shopping.”
The college admissions scandal is prompting a lot of discussions – including the one I’m having with my high school junior.
It’s never too soon to start preparing your kids for college. Check out these 10 Things To Teach Your Kids Before College.
Students seeking college scholarship money need to think long and hard about who they ask to write their letters of recommendation.