Sentences with phrase «kids got to college»

And as Shirley Ann is pointing out, those matter a lot when kids get to college, but they're not all that matters.
By the time some of these kids get to college, the college [health care providers] say they've had this addiction for several years and it's entrenched.»
I chose to work with CSA because I feel very passionately about the organization's mission of helping kids get to college.
Considering the skyrocketing costs of higher education, you've likely been saving with a 529 plan for years, but obviously the closer your kid gets to college the less time you have to contribute money to a fund and get compounding interest.

Not exact matches

Since the book is a key reason my kids were able to go to the colleges of their choice, the moral seems clear to me: Get as much input from your customers as you can and act on it.
Students are generally short of money and have no lack of other demands on their time (though, let's be honest, plenty of college kids aren't exactly getting up at the crack of dawn to hit the books or spending every waking hour working).
«This is not something a guy who's making $ 100,000 a year, who's got a mortgage and two kids in college ought to be invested in.»
«College is getting exorbitant, so families and their kids have to start making a plan when they are young,» he says.
As a kid just out of college, Fiance acknowledges he had to find new ways to get people to take him seriously.
With high - achieving millennials, Lockwood suggests another subtle tactic to help to jar the competitive instinct that already got kids through college, or put them into the workforce, which is no small feat.
«I would love to see that suggestion get more traction before we approach the idea of kids losing steam in college in America.»
There are jobs our kids can get in college, scholarships they can earn, community colleges they can attend for a couple of years and if push comes to shove, student loans they can take out.
In «Clark Smart Parents, Clark Smart Kids,» he addresses everything from allowances — when and how much to give — to teaching teens about credit cards and navigating the purchase of a first car — how to get it, pay for it, and insure it — to saving for college, paying off loans, staying out of debt, and much more!
If you're organized, knowledgeable about the higher education process, and enjoy working with adolescents and their parents, consider starting a side business as an independent college application consultant to help more smart, ambitious, and qualified kids get into the schools of their dreams.
You might also want life insurance to cover college expenses for your kids if you die, or pay off your mortgage at that point, or to pay for funeral expenses, or to protect the income your business gets from a key employee.
Considering that we will never get that many chances to spend time together as a family after kids head out to college, this addition is worth it to me.
Using the argument of neutrality is too dismissive to the more pertinent fact at hand — likely about $ 300k was deployed to control $ 1.6 m, to be used in any way shape or form when it is all said and done... retiring abroad, funding their kids college, starting their tube meat meat truck business after they get tired of the lawyering rat race, etc etc..
The mission of Fam - ess is to teach kids financial discipline long before they go off to college or get their first job, while helping inform the making of new products that are worth working for.
And these numbers are expected to get even worse during the second quarter, where the drop of TV subscribers often accelerates due to college kids heading home for the summer (often without reconnecting when they return in the fall).
American college kids need Christianity to get morality back.
If you don't agree with Hogg's politics, there's no reason for an adult to taunt a 17 - year - old kid to millions of Twitter followers for not getting accepted to colleges he applied for.
They know that, while there are no sure things, someone with a four - year college degree is much more likely to be in the labor force, be employed, get married, stay married, and keep their kids out of trouble.
That same kid who went on to community college also got jacked by some christain dirt bags that told the sports director he was stealing stuff from the gym.
Second, I'm saving like a m - f-er so my kids can go to college and a murderer gets a free master's degree?
Of course «our» tax dollars and the welfare and he got college degree pay by us too everything free, but my kids pay student loans to go to college how sad the criminals get help and honest people don't, my kids work hard babysitting, delivering newspapers, washing cars, packing groceries, cutting grass oh that make me so proud of my kids!
while this murdered was breeding kids getting college paid I wonder if instead of teaching my kids good morals and good standars teach them how to kill people I bet they got free education!
Their children graduate from institutions like Ohio State University and fall in line with what they see as the norm: going to college, getting married, having kids.
In America, the claim is that we are all free to do what we want but in reality it is expected that we all grow up, go to college, get a job in a cubicle, get married to someone of the opposite and have kids.
Two of my kids are fresh out of college and two are still in college and it's challenging to try to find a window of time where we can all get together.
To think that my TV show can impact people around America or around the world and change a life or two, or put a few extra dollars in somebody's pocket, or get a kid to college, that's what's inspirinTo think that my TV show can impact people around America or around the world and change a life or two, or put a few extra dollars in somebody's pocket, or get a kid to college, that's what's inspirinto college, that's what's inspiring.
If a kid is 5» 6 and runs a legit 4.5 40, he's not going to get a ton of college football → NFL looks.
I mean, how many kids have used football to get college scholarships and then degrees.
Here's my take: There are thousands of wealthy people whose children end up getting full rides to play a sport, including many former professional athletes whose kids end up playing in college.
Yet most athletic officials, even those who oppose it, regard Prop 42 as a well - intentioned effort to strike a balance between academic integrity and the need to provide an opportunity for the disadvantaged athlete who wants a degree and is willing to work hard to get it — a kid like John Thompson was as a high school senior in Washington, D.C. Thompson says he could not have gone to college under Prop 42, but he's careful not to paint Proposition 42 in racial terms.
I can't wait to see what we got in this kid, he's a total stud, 349 tackles in college???? wow..
I would rather these kids get paid in the minor leagues then be beholden to the false premise of an education (see UNC term paper above) I get the idea that in college they are paid by having tuition room and board paid for but they are not getting a real education.
I do believe that it's enhanced opportunities for a lot of kids, but maybe more than anything, it's taken the opportunity for the college coaches and folks like ourselves to get an early start on building a database, putting together each and every class.»
For every college kid who derives nothing but entertainment from his betting, there is another who cons his parents to get money to cover his gambling losses, another who becomes so consumed with betting that he tosses away an education and another who plunges into gambling addiction.
If you ever wanted to know more about how the kids and I go about our unschooling lives, what drew me to unschooling, my thoughts on getting into college, and my favorite things about unschooling, I encourage you to read my interview.
Now that I'm at midlife, however, and helping to get two kids through college, hoping to retire -LSB-...]
With our culture and our nation's emphasis on high academic achievement, the perception that in order to get into college kids need straight As and perfect test scores, increased course work and more complex curricula, teachers are feeling the pressure to cover more material, and to prepare kids for the next grade.
The idea is to get kids thinking about the realities of college life and focus on the fact that it is a time of great personal development.
BTW Attending college at 29, okay soon to be 30, and a few kids (you know who are no where near 30) in my class admit to writing fanatical mean - spirited blog posts like some of these, just for the fun of getting a rise out of people.
Sure, a college kid will get it, but a 2 year old will get mixed messages if he's just allowed to pee anywhere, anytime, while naked.
For my 12th grader it is all about the administration getting the school on the Newsweek top 1000 school list by making sure the high school kids are taking the max number of AP classes and if they aren't, trying to make them feel guilty for not doing so by telling them they will never get into the college of their choice with «a schedule like that!»
If you are getting ready to make the jump and buy a new laptop before sending your kid off to college, consider these factors before finally settling on one.
And certainly by the time that kids are getting ready to leave home for college or for the work force, they should be able to start setting their own curfew.
I bring this up not only because I've been thinking a lot about talking to kids about diversity and privilege in the context of the current election but also because I have heard a number of friends talk recently about not saving for college because it means their kids will get less financial aid.
As kids get closer to high school and college applications, many parents struggle with the idea of pushing their kid into every activity, AP class or sport in the hopes of helping them get ahead later in life.
Now that I'm at midlife, however, and helping to get two kids through college, hoping to retire one day, and dealing with the never - ending costs of living (my broken clavicle cost me a lot of money, despite my health insurance, and my car appears to have an electrical problem, no doubt a pricey problem, that I need to deal with ASAP), I think about money a wee bit more.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z